Southern California Weather Force has issued the final forecast for a powerful storm that will impact Southern California later today, tonight, Monday, and last into Tuesday. This system has been finalized as a category five out of the one through six scale.
Since I don’t feel to write a novel, we can talk about fonts, bullet point summaries, etc, but I’ll let you use the maps for this event. I will note that the zoom-in maps now contain a zoom-in on the Inland Empire, so if you live there (as I do) you can enjoy that new addition. I also decided to do the mountain zone zoom-in feature for the snow, which will be standard from here on out.
Any additional alerts will be issued accordingly, but this has been well taken care of over the last 10 days.
Oh and please do not say it is not raining where you are yet until Tuesday is over. Read the timing. Just when you think to comment it isn’t reading, read the timing, and when you think you read it enough… Read is once more …
For the rest of the forecast, use the model images here –
RAIN
SNOW
WIND
Raiden Storm Wind Gust Intensity Scale –
8. Extensive widespread damage.
7. Trees are broken or uprooted, building damage is considerable. – High Profile Vehicle Roll-Over CERTAIN.
6. SOME Trees are broken or uprooted, building damage is possible. – High Profile Vehicle Roll-Over Likely, Do NOT recommend Traveling in this zone. This zone also is the starting zone where trees and powerlines will fall and damage cars and even kill people near or in them!
5. Slight damage occurs to buildings; shingles are blown off of roofs. HIGH WIND WARNING CRITERIA – High Profile Vehicle Roll-Over Possible if weight is not corrected.
4. Twigs and small branches are broken from trees, walking is difficult.
3. Large trees sway, becoming difficult to walk. POWER SHUTDOWN THRESHOLD DURING FIRE WEATHER / WIND ADVISORY CRITERIA
– Raiden Storm –
https://www.southerncaliforniaweatherforce.com
Master General Meteorologist – is a consulting meteorologist for over 50 companies, including energy, agriculture, aviation, marine, leisure, and many more areas. He has certs from Mississippi State for broadcast met and Penn State forecasting certs MET 101, 241, 341 and 361 as a meteorologist, but before then was completely self-taught, barely learning a thing from the schools that he did not already know.
Both short and long-range is very important to know in those jobs so you can bet on accuracy here. He is versed in fields like Western USA, Tornadoes, Floods, Hurricanes, High Winds, Fire Behavior, Snow and Blizzards, Short Range, Long Range, Seasonal, and Life-Threatening decisions with over 25 years’ experience, out forecasting all weather services available today with lead-time and precision, which makes him a focus of ridicule and envy.
NOTE: Alerts are posted on here, be it a tornado watch, etc, and these alerts are issued from this office and nowhere else. At times, which is often, you will see an alert forecast posted on here that you do not see elsewhere.