Boston Bulldog
Member
I'm going to try and compile a list of weather terms here so when people don't know some terms being thrown around, they can refer back to here. (Maybe someone could pin this?) Feel free to add some.
-Miller A Storm: A type of nor'easter. One primary low, often better snow for the coast rather than the ski areas.

-Miller B Storm: Another type of Nor'easter. One low dies inland and another one forms off the coast. Often rain at the coast and snow in the ski areas (My favorite type of storm)

-OTS: Out to Sea
-SWFE: Southwest Flow Event. Often starts off as snow in all of NE, changes to ice and rain at the coast, ice/snow inland. Warm air overrruns the cold

-Clipper: Fast moving storm coming out of Canada. Sometimes can form a Miller B (Most extreme case, the Blizzard of 2005), or just lift into canada. Often brings good upslope snows in the Mountains
-Upslope Snow: Instablitiy combined with warm/cold winds creates snow showers over the Mountains. Can drop anywhere from dusting to feet of snow depending where you are. (Jay Cloud is an extreme example of this)
-Cutter/Inland Runner: Low tracks inland and doesn't become a Miller B. This means R@!n and Ice for us. Our worst nightmare.
-QPF: Total precipitation on the models
Models
-EURO(European): Very Reliable.
-GFS(American): Very Reliable, but often shows fantasy storms in the long range. Tread carefully outside of 5 days
-NAM: Godawful. Worst Model Out there, period
-GEFS: Meh, not great
-RGEM: Normally in the same class as the NAM, but has been pretty good this year actually
-SREF's: Tries to predict precipitation, not very good at it.
-CMC: The Canadian Model. (gah!) Could be worse than the NAM...
Again name some more if you know some.
-Miller A Storm: A type of nor'easter. One primary low, often better snow for the coast rather than the ski areas.

-Miller B Storm: Another type of Nor'easter. One low dies inland and another one forms off the coast. Often rain at the coast and snow in the ski areas (My favorite type of storm)

-OTS: Out to Sea
-SWFE: Southwest Flow Event. Often starts off as snow in all of NE, changes to ice and rain at the coast, ice/snow inland. Warm air overrruns the cold

-Clipper: Fast moving storm coming out of Canada. Sometimes can form a Miller B (Most extreme case, the Blizzard of 2005), or just lift into canada. Often brings good upslope snows in the Mountains
-Upslope Snow: Instablitiy combined with warm/cold winds creates snow showers over the Mountains. Can drop anywhere from dusting to feet of snow depending where you are. (Jay Cloud is an extreme example of this)
-Cutter/Inland Runner: Low tracks inland and doesn't become a Miller B. This means R@!n and Ice for us. Our worst nightmare.
-QPF: Total precipitation on the models
Models
-EURO(European): Very Reliable.
-GFS(American): Very Reliable, but often shows fantasy storms in the long range. Tread carefully outside of 5 days
-NAM: Godawful. Worst Model Out there, period
-GEFS: Meh, not great
-RGEM: Normally in the same class as the NAM, but has been pretty good this year actually
-SREF's: Tries to predict precipitation, not very good at it.
-CMC: The Canadian Model. (gah!) Could be worse than the NAM...
Again name some more if you know some.
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