Summary: Model Mayhem Continues! At 0Z, the Euro/UK/ICON all have the surface low move ENE from Cape Hatteras with very robust precip fields (with snow on the NW side of those fields) that are just too far SE to do much for people who live on land, while the GFS/CMC/AIFS/Weathernext2 have surface lows that move ENE from about Norfolk, 100+ miles N or Hatteras, with robust precip fields which are close enough to land to put down a lot of snow at the coast and lesser amounts as one goes inland.
Which camp do I believe? No idea, but I will say that the fact that the 0Z Euro ensemble mean is well NW of the Op Euro tells me that the Op Euro has a decent chance of being a bit of a SE outlier and that it should move NW and show more snow. If that were the case, that would tip the balance towards a snowier solution, as right now, the two best models (Euro-AIFS and Euro-Op) are in different camps. Bottom line is that we could see anything from a major snowstorm for all to a whiff for all and everything in-between, so stay tuned.
Details: At 0Z, the snowfall variance across the major models is crazy high. Briefly, the GFS and CMC were pretty big hits again with everyone S of 78 getting 6”+ and coastal areas getting 12”+ and the WeatherNext 2 continued to have 3-5" for 95/NW and 5-8" towards the coast, while the UK was a whiff, and the AIGFS and ICON were minor hits (1-3” type). The two best models diverged, with the AIFS making a significant move snowier showing 4-6” for 95, 2-4” NW and 6-10” towards, while the Euro stayed with a couple of inches of snow. Hard to make a definitive forecast, IMO, at least based on the models - pros use a lot more than models though, but even the good ones I see on line and in the media generally don't have high confidence in a particular outcome right now.
It’s also worth noting that the GFS ensemble mean was in line with the GFS-Op, and both the Euro and AIFS ensemble means leaned a bit NW of their Operational models, indicating some likelihood of those Op models not being far enough NW (and not snowy enough as moving NW brings more precip/snow inland). Earlier in the day some of the ensemble means were SE of their Op runs, which made one think the Op models were snowier than they should have been. It’s more complicated than this actually, but a full deep dive into the 20-50 ensemble runs for each parent model (all run with varying inputs to evaluate model sensitivity and consistency) and what they mean vs. the Ops would take a page, at least.
Bottom line for me is that a major snowstorm for all is possible, although that seems more likely towards the coast, and a minor to moderate snowstorm is possible for 95 SE to the coast and a near to complete whiff for all is also quite possible (as well as everything in-between the major and whiff possibilities) and I truly couldn’t tell you which is most likely. I think we simply need more time to develop a reasonable consensus, as we’re still almost 4 days from the start of the event, which is now looking more likely to be Sunday afternoon than sunrise Sunday. Also, keep in mind that with coastal storms, if the track gets too close to the coast, rain could become an issue for coastal areas (this is not an issue now).
https://www.americanwx.com/bb/topic/62604-winter-storm-threat-feb-22-24th/page/27/