Currently, there's a war between the very warm NAM, which blasts warm air though the mid-levels well north to such cities as Worcester and Boston, and the colder GFS, which keeps Boston, Worcester, and Providence in all snow. I'm leaning heavily toward the colder GFS.
1) The presence of a block (NAO ~ -1.000) makes it unlikely that the NAM's scenario of blasting very warm air--almost unimpeded--into central New England at the mid-levels is more feasible than the GFS's colder idea.
2) The 2/28 12z GFS's soundings are closest to the 2/28 0z ECMWF at 850 mb. Select examples follow (°C):
Code: Select all
City EC .GFS .NAM
ALB -7.8 -9.9 -1.2
BDL -5.2 -7.7 2.8
BOS -6.0 -8.2 -0.3
NYC -3.0 -5.9 7.1
PVD -3.6 -6.2 2.8
Differences: GFS vs. ECMWF:
Albany: -2.1°C
Boston: -2.2°C
Hartford: -2.5°C
New York City: -2.9°C
Providence: -2.6°C
Differences: NAM vs. ECMWF:
Albany: +6.6°C
Boston: +5.7°C
Hartford: +8.0°C
New York City: +10.1°C
Providence: +6.4°C
Initial Estimates:
Albany: 2"-5"
Boston: 3"-6"
Burlington: 2"-4"
Concord: 2"-5"
Hartford: 3"-7"
New York City: 1" or less
Newark: 1" or less
Portland: 1"-3"
Providence: 3"-6"
Worcester: 3"-7"