National Weather Service Text Product
AFOS product RWSTX
Dates interpreted at 00:00 UTCDisplaying AFOS PIL: RWSTX
Product Timestamp: 2005-01-11 11:15 UTC
Bulk Download
Bulk Download Help
This bulk download tool provides the NWS text
in a raw form, hopefully directly usable by your processing system.
You can either provide a complete 6-character PIL/AFOS ID or provide
the 3-character base ID (e.g., AFD). The start and end
dates represent 00 UTC for those dates. The Zip format is useful as
the filenames will have the product timestamp, which is useful for
when the product format has ambiguous timestamps.
000 AWUS84 KLUB 111135 RWSTX WEST TEXAS/OKLAHOMA PANHANDLE WEATHER SUMMARY NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE LUBBOCK TX 515 AM CST TUE JAN 11 2005 MOSTLY CLOUDY TO OVERCAST SKIES PREVAILED ACROSS MOST OF THE REGION EARLY THIS MORNING. A COLD FRONT WAS MOVING SOUTH THROUGH THE TEXAS PANHANDLE SEPARATING MILD AIR TO THE SOUTH FROM VERY COLD AIR... OVERCAST SKIES AND AREAS OF FOG TO THE NORTH. NORTH OF THE FRONT WINDS WERE FROM THE NORTH AT 5 TO 15 MPH WHILE TEMPERATURES WERE MOSTLY IN THE 20S. ELSEWHERE WINDS WERE GENERALLY FROM THE SOUTHWEST TO WEST AT 5 TO 15 MPH WITH TEMPERATURES MOSTLY IN THE 40S. EXTREMES AT 5 AM CST WERE 28 DEGREES AT PERRYTON AND 57 AT FORT STOCKTON. WEST TEXAS/OKLAHOMA PANHANDLE FORECAST SUMMARY... COLD AND CLOUDY TODAY NORTH OF THE FRONT WITH HIGHS THERE IN THE 30S AND 40S. HIGHS ELSEWHERE SHOULD BE MAINLY IN THE 60S AND LOWER 70S WITH PERIODS OF HIGH CLOUDS. A SLIGHT CHANCE OF PRECIPITATION ENTERS THE FORECAST FOR NORTHERN AND WESTERN AREAS TONIGHT AS AN UPPER LEVEL STORM SYSTEM APPROACHES THE REGION. LOWS WILL RANGE FROM THE UPPER 20S FAR NORTH TO THE 40S SOUTH. IT WILL BE WINDY WEDNESDAY...WITH A SLIGHT CHANCE OF RAIN SHOWERS ACROSS NORTHERN AREAS. HIGHS WILL RANGE FROM THE 30S NORTHEASTERN PANHANDLES TO THE MID 60S SOUTH TO THE LOWER 70S ALONG THE BIG BEND OF THE RIO GRANDE. EXPECT LOWS IN THE 20S AND 30S. COOLER WEDNESDAY NIGHT AND THURSDAY WITH SOME CLEARING EXPECTED. HIGHS WILL BE IN THE 30S AND 40S. $$