A few thoughts on model performance for 02/17/18:
1. Kuchera ratios generally performed better than snow depth, especially for the Euro. The above Euro snow depth plots look horrible, but the Kuchera ratio plots were much closer to reality. For comparison, here's the Kuchera ratio plot for the Euro's last run before the storm.
2. Generally I don't put much weight in ops beyond 5 days, but the long-range performances of the Euro, GGEM, and ICON were impressive. The Euro picked up on the snow threat as soon as it entered its 240-hour window. It kept it for five runs, then lost it for four runs, then picked it up again 120 hours out and never lost it. The GGEM picked up on the storm 156 hours out and never lost it, and the ICON picked up on the storm at least 156 hours out and never lost it. I can't find images back that far, but I think the ICON got the storm as soon as it was within its 180-hour range. The GFS kept the storm suppressed for too long, first finding it 114 hours out and then losing it before finding it for good 102 hours out.
I want to point out that this does not mean the GFS did poorly. It's not normal for ops to lock on to storms 6 1/2 days out. But someone who was focused on the Euro and GFS ops might have missed what the GGEM, ICON, and many ensemble members were indicating nearly a week in advance. It's hard to know which model is going to have the right idea far in advance. For the Super Bowl ice storm, it was the GFS. (If I find time I'll try to add that one to this thread.)
3. The Euro seemed to do a good job with qpf, and so did the ICON. The ICON calculates its own snow ratios, which paint a more impressive picture than the snow depth maps shown above. It consistently called for a widespread 1-3", with some relatively minor run-to-run fluctuations, and that's eactly what we got. The details of who got what were less consistent.
4. The RGEM ensemble did a nice job of picking up on the jackpot zone in central MD early.