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First Legit Storm Potential of the Season Upon Us


40/70 Benchmark
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2 minutes ago, CoastalWx said:

You guys looked like 3-5 at least anyways 

Seem like w/ time, N&W of 495 is becoming the target max for Sunday.  Compared to 24 hr ago when we were worried about if the pcpn shield would get any further N&W than TAN!  Models are hurtin', global and mesoscale, recently.  Can't recall so many issues in the short range!

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1 minute ago, vortex95 said:

Seem like w/ time, N&W of 495 is becoming the target max for Sunday.  Compared to 24 hr ago when we were worried about if the pcpn shield would get any further N&W than TAN!  Models are hurtin', global and mesoscale, recently.  Can't recall so many issues in the short range!

I feel ok where I am for now. I’m hoping for 4” of heavy wet snow which would be great vs fluff. 

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We just don't know

436
FXUS61 KGYX 171825
AFDGYX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Gray ME
125 PM EST Sat Jan 17 2026

.WHAT HAS CHANGED...
Confidence in the coastal plain seeing accumulating snow Sunday
night is increasing as more model solutions trend slightly
westward, but higher than usual uncertainty remains in totals at
this time range.
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3pm AFD from BOX

Quote
KEY MESSAGE 2...Coastal low passes just SE of the Benchmark,
bringing 2-5 inches with localized areas of 6 inches, especially
in SE MA and RI.

An elongated shortwave trough stretching from the northern Great
Lakes down into the Gulf Coast will spin up a coastal low offshore,
passing just southeast of the benchmark. Guidance continues to come
into Better agreement on track with this low, but remains spread on
how far NW the QPF field extends.  Guidance generally ticked up
total QPF across the region with 1/2 to 3/4 inches across the Cape
and Islands, and a 1/4 to 1/2 inch along and south of the I-95
corridor.  How this translates into snowfall accumulation will
depend heavily on temperatures and mid-level forcing.  Temperatures
during this event will be marginal, with temperatures staying near
freezing inland and at or above freezing for the Cape and Islands.
This will impact snow totals as snow will melt and compress as it
falls. Even areas inland will see very wet and heavy snow.  Even
where temperatures are above freezing, still anticipating
accumulations for temps between 32-35F as strong mid-level forcing
will allow for precipitation to become heavy enough to drag down
cooler air and remain as snow rather than turning to rain.

The highest confidence in snow totals across the region is in SE MA
and into RI, where strong mid-level forcing and temperatures near or
below freezing will overlap.  Snow totals in this area will range
from 3-5 inches, with localized areas reaching 6 inches. While there
will be good forcing over Nantucket and Block Island, temperatures
will likely be too warm for significant accumulations, but a slushy
inch remains possible.  Across CT and into north-eastern MA, the mid-
level forcing is not quite as strong, but lower temperatures will
allow for 2-4 inches, with localized spots up to 5 inches.
Uncertainty is highest across NW MA, where a lack of mid-level
forcing and dry air will limit totals. Still could see 1-3 inches,
but if the low moves closer to the benchmark, these totals could
increase, and the advisory could be expanded NW.

Timing this system out, A band of snow showers associated with the
prefrontal wave moves into CT as early as 7 am, but most likely not
arriving until after 10 am.  Snow spreads north and east into the
rest of the region after the lunch hour.  Snow will initially start
light with rates of under half an inch per hour.  Heaviest snow
rates arrive later in the afternoon and into the early evening, with
rates between 1/2 inch and 1 inch per hour through 10 pm to
midnight.  Snow rates could exceed 1 to 1.5 inches per hour near the
Cape and Far SE MA if temperatures are able to cool below freezing.
Snow ends from west to east between 10 pm and 2 am, snow showers may
linger into Monday morning.  Breezy winds are expected Monday
afternoon behind the system, but given the wet and heavy nature of
the snow, we do not anticipate blowing snow impacts on Monday.

 

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23 minutes ago, CoastalWx said:

I think ideally whatever comes up tomorrow morning continues through the afternoon to keep temps down. Models are disagreeing with that. You would think with the Gulf of Mexico open you’d have good moisture though. We shall see.

Speaking of the Gulf, radars down in Bama are lighting up way ahead of schedule.

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20 minutes ago, vortex95 said:

Seem like w/ time, N&W of 495 is becoming the target max for Sunday.  Compared to 24 hr ago when we were worried about if the pcpn shield would get any further N&W than TAN!  Models are hurtin', global and mesoscale, recently.  Can't recall so many issues in the short range!

How we pray

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38 minutes ago, dryslot said:

Love the disclaimer for the RRFS...lol

The RRFS A is a prototype NOAA run and not for decision making. It will post as available, and outages may occur. More RRFS details are available here.

They should have that disclaimer on all models lately.

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38 minutes ago, dryslot said:

Love the disclaimer for the RRFS...lol

The RRFS A is a prototype NOAA run and not for decision making. It will post as available, and outages may occur. More RRFS details are available here.

I don’t believe RRFS v1 is ever going into production. It’s based on FV3 which they found to be not great. There already is a second version of the RRFS v2 which will be based on MPAS which will likely end up the replacement for the NAM, NAM 3k, RAP, and HRRR…

https://gsl.noaa.gov/research/predictions

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1 hour ago, vortex95 said:

 

What's this rear weenie bonus convectivey-NORLUN type stuff at the end???  12z had it as well.  Nothing would surprise me given how odd this season is so far w/ local snow maxes!


 

hrrr3.png

what's the sounding like at that time  ... kind of has a norlun look to it but there's some cyclostrophic banded structure too so not entirely. 

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