Model Diagnostic Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 1220 AM EDT Tue Jun 04 2019 Valid Jun 04/0000 UTC thru Jun 07/1200 UTC ...See NOUS42 KWNO (ADMNFD) for the status of the upper air ingest... 00Z Model Evaluation with Confidence and Preference ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ...Overall Pattern Across the CONUS... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Preference: Blend of 00Z GFS, 12Z ECMWF, 12Z UKMET Less weight on the UKMET beyond 06.12Z Confidence: Slightly above average Models continue to be in very good agreement with the northern stream; this will begin with zonal flow near the Canadian border at the beginning of the forecast period, and transition to a pattern with troughs on either coast and a gradual amplification. All of the deterministic model mid-upper level height forecasts are contained well within the full envelope of ensemble spread. The one exception is the 00Z NAM, which seems to progress the amplifying trough in the Northwest faster than the other deterministic models. Therefore, the NAM is not favored in the model preference there. Further to the south, models have gradually converged on a similar forecast with how the area of low pressure in the western Gulf of Mexico will interact with a mid-upper level low ejecting east into the southern Plains. In particular, the 12Z ECMWF and UKMET and 00Z GFS are reasonably similar and have good support from ensemble members. However, after 06.12Z (into the Day 3 QPF period), the UKMET does begin to shift a surface low much further east along the Gulf Coast than the GFS and ECMWF and their ensemble means. Therefore, less weight was placed on the UKMET beyond Thursday morning. The 00Z NAM and 12Z CMC seem to show a faster progression of the trough than the other deterministic models (with very little ensemble support), and the swaths of heavy QPF also make more of an eastward progression by Thursday than the other models. Those two models are not included in the model preference. Model trends at www.wpc.noaa.gov/html/model2.html 500 mb forecasts at www.wpc.noaa.gov/h5pref/h5pref.shtml Lamers