Also the models are trending stronger and farther north!
MAJOR surprise event!
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The posts in this forum are NOT official forecast and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or STORM2K.
		
		
	
The posts in this forum are NOT official forecast and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or STORM2K.MAJOR surprise event!
Looks like I went from 1-3" to 4-7"!  Radar is looking very good, and the precip is far north!  WOOOOOOOOO! 
Also the models are trending stronger and farther north!
			
									
						Also the models are trending stronger and farther north!
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						initial snow
Looks ominou on doppler.  But that first batch of snow is not reaching the ground.  The air maybe too dry to start off this event.  That combined with the short timing of this event could favor more of a 2-4" snow for nw burbs of Philly as opposed to more than 4".  
Not bad for the start of 2004, especially after Wednesday nights snow. We got nothing here Wednesday night except a dusting of snow. It may turn out a bit better with time later tonite. But ice is the biggest issue down here, perhaps a prolonged 5-6 hour period of ice.
Jim
			
									
						Not bad for the start of 2004, especially after Wednesday nights snow. We got nothing here Wednesday night except a dusting of snow. It may turn out a bit better with time later tonite. But ice is the biggest issue down here, perhaps a prolonged 5-6 hour period of ice.
Jim
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				ColdFront77
 
Dj3 wrote:ITs showing snow on the radar but its probably evaporating before it hits the ground. thanks for your help
That was some virga about five hours ago. The latest radar sure looks more impressive now, must be snowing in the Pittsburgh area now.
Colin wrote:Doubt it Jim...the precip extends to New Mexico! :o I don't see it being a "short event," not a long event either, but 12-16
hours IMO.
The precipitation (snow and mix in the eastern portions and rain over the Ohio and Mississippi Valleys, westward through Kansas and into northern Texas and eastern New Mexico) may not be moving "the long way." - so 12 to 16 hours of precipitation sounds reasonable.
There is really no way the activity can take half to two-thirds of a day to move from eastern New Mexico/northern Texas to Pennsylvania.
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