Kind of what I've been thinking the last few days. I've always sucked with the topographic aspect when making maps so I decided to use my brain and have a topographic map pulled up to try and more accurately place the higher totals where greatest elevation is and where that cutoff should be.
Probably too low in northern Berkshire County where they may get upslope influences. I also do think there could be some 5-7'' totals in the highest elevations northwest of Worcester. That area should have the best combination of a cold enough profile from the sfc up, get into the higher QPF totals with all QPF being snow, and some of the strongest lift into the DGZ and have the best ratios.
Berkshires into the northwest hills of Connecticut...usually pretty easy for them, always all snow and as long as the lift is great they'll have great ratios too.
Starting to think Boston will end up a bit too much on the warm side for anything outside of some mixing and certainly nothing that is going to stick to anything with the exception of cars sitting in parking lots that haven't been warmed up yet.
Could go crazy trying to decipher where that boundary between something around a coating will occur to as much as 2-3''. May bring that 1-3'' a smudge south.