Bob Hartig
EF5
I've been on this forum for around five years now. You'd think I'd be one of the guys with all the answers. Not so--there's still plenty of stuff I don't get, and one of them is mixing ratios.
I understand mixing ratios vaguely as a means of determining the amount of water vapor present in a mass of air, expressed in grams per kilogram (g/kg). But how do I use this information? So far I've gone about getting a sense of moisture by looking at dewpoints and Td depressions, and I've done fine that way. But moisture being as critical as it is to the convective process, I'd like to get a better understanding of some of the other ways of looking at and measuring it--so that instead of being dumb but happy, I can be happy and a little bit smarter.
So, to those of you who use mixing ratios in your forecasting: what do I need to know in order to use them? Please keep your answer as simple and application-oriented as possible. What I'm looking for is some essential, hands-on pointers for using the mixing ratio:
* How do you use it?
* What do you look for?
* Any thresholds I need to keep in mind?
Thanks in advance for your helpfulness! I much appreciate the knowledge that many of you so willingly share.
I understand mixing ratios vaguely as a means of determining the amount of water vapor present in a mass of air, expressed in grams per kilogram (g/kg). But how do I use this information? So far I've gone about getting a sense of moisture by looking at dewpoints and Td depressions, and I've done fine that way. But moisture being as critical as it is to the convective process, I'd like to get a better understanding of some of the other ways of looking at and measuring it--so that instead of being dumb but happy, I can be happy and a little bit smarter.

So, to those of you who use mixing ratios in your forecasting: what do I need to know in order to use them? Please keep your answer as simple and application-oriented as possible. What I'm looking for is some essential, hands-on pointers for using the mixing ratio:
* How do you use it?
* What do you look for?
* Any thresholds I need to keep in mind?
Thanks in advance for your helpfulness! I much appreciate the knowledge that many of you so willingly share.