FLguy wrote:Derek Ortt wrote:Weather will NEVER be able to be predicted more than 2 weeks in advance as the equations of the atmosphere cannnot be solved precisely by the models, they are approximated. By the end of 14 days, the errors have simply grown too large
which is why pattern recognition is ALMOST ALWAYS more effective in meadium range forecasting, than just taking numerical model output at face value. and analoging is much more effective in seasonal forecasting as compared to staring at a long-range climate model. case in point, the AGCM's preformance prior to the 2001-02 winter. which was laughable at best.
the GFS (AVN/MRF) is a better example of the inconsistencies in meadium range model preformance. beyond 240hrs, the output is for the most part useless.
And the long range model data is way useless because for the same reason you said FLguy.
Exactly again ... which refers me to my original post on this thread ...
TODAY IS A GOOD EXAMPLE OF WHY HUMANS ARE STILL NEEDED IN THE FORECAST PROCESS...AND HOW EASY IT IS TO BECOME RELIANT ON MODELS AND FORGET THAT THEY CANNOT HANDLE EVERY SCENARIO BY THEMSELVES. from the GSP AFD in regards of JUST WHERE THE CAD would penetrate ...
And I agree with Derek as well 100%. And just remember, there are smaller scale features that sometimes are totally missed or misread by guidance and just that ALONE can cause large-scale errors the further out you go ...
And for anyone else, remember, that the model guidance that we currently have, some run on respectable resolutions, some aren't ... generally do NOT do well with CAD situations (The ETA is good at AG - ageostrophic gradient, but particularly horrible in dealing with TC's) ... The GFS did much better this past season in tropical cyclone genesis in 2003, but again, comes down to all the biases found in the models ... and these flaws are subject to human interpretation, and sometimes, that can be just as flawed as the model guidance outputs, especially, in MR and LR timeframes.
SF