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Discussion-OBS slippery plowable moderate to high impact snowstorm with many delays near I95 and inland btwn 10AM Sun 1/19-4AM Mon Jan 20. R/S line uncertain near and east of I95 - parts of LI may be limited snowfall of around 1"?


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4 minutes ago, Roger Smith said:

Is there any easy answer to the question, what is the difference between an "A.I." weather model and the regular models? At first glance, it would see that all weather models are "A.I."  

I was thinking about that too.  I have no idea if this is correct, but I would imagine that the regular models don't 'learn'.  So if you have the exact same setup a year from now as you do today, they'll make the exact same prediction, unless they've released an upgrade to it.  But an 'AI' model would learn and presumably improve and might make a somewhat different forecast for an identical setup in the future. 

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1 minute ago, mob1 said:

By 1.7 miles. 

 

The storm is in 48 hours, that shift means nothing. It's more about whether it's right in the first place, but recents trends have been worrying.  

It caved to everything else on the other storm so I am not sure I am too confident about what its doing.  It probably ends up close to a GFS/ICON idea in the end which is middle between Euro/RGEM

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38 minutes ago, NorthShoreWx said:

Difficult to interpolate that chart, but it looks more like just after 18z.  Plus it's the boundary layer.  If it's snowing above, it'll be snowing there.  A sounding would be better.

The sounding shows it below freezing. On the gfs. 

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3 minutes ago, BoulderWX said:

I’m nervous where I am 35 miles west of NYC. If I was in the city or along the coast I’d be keeping my expectations in check. Could be a solid storm but just as much argues the opposite 

Dude, MMU?

For our area, I’d rather this hug then get shredded out to sea like the prior month plus of potential. Apologies to the costal folks in that scenario.
 

 

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3 minutes ago, ForestHillWx said:

Dude, MMU?

For our area, I’d rather this hug then get shredded out to sea like the prior month plus of potential. Apologies to the costal folks in that scenario.
 

 

Yes sir, granted I’m always a little nervous.
 

Agree, I’d rather have a stronger coastal with more precipitation and worry about precip type, but still not seeing support for the 6-10 from NWS unless we get that perfect track 

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8 minutes ago, MJO812 said:

What trends? Cmc and rgem is an outlier 

Every single model has trended towards moving the heaviest precipitation west of us. You're relying on a front to move through and falling temps, and I think you've been doing this long enough to understand that we usually cool slower than forecasted and with lighter precipitation you'll have BL issues even if it's sufficiently cold aloft.

If the axis of heaviest precipitation moves back east a bit on models I'll be more confident, but right now I think you're setting yourself up for a major disappointment.   

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4 minutes ago, mob1 said:

Every single model has trended towards moving the heaviest precipitation west of us. You're relying on a front to move through and falling temps, and I think you've been doing this long enough to understand that we usually cool slower than forecasted and with lighter precipitation you'll have BL issues even if it's sufficiently cold aloft.

If the axis of heaviest precipitation moves back east a bit on models I'll be more confident, but right now I think you're setting yourself up for a major disappointment.   

We are always living on the edge. We do this with every storm. 

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