C
Chiefmcfuz
Guest
I. Hate. Snow.
Now back to your regular programming.
Now back to your regular programming.
I. Hate. Snow.
Now back to your regular programming.
how do you hate snow and own an evo. i love snow but hate other drivers. they ruin it. i can play in the snow with the evo all day long if i had a spot for it!
i have no thread left too and plan on roughing it out until spring and buy new BBSs. oh i'm selling my jdm rear if your interested. brand new never seen ass.
i love the snow and the cold weather.it keeps the animals inside.always seems safer on the streets when the weather is like this :--)
I couldn't agree with you more!!!I dont mind the snow but - I HATE FLAKES![]()
Scenario #1: Low tracks farther inland
- Cold air (i.e., subfreezing air) may give way, especially near the coast.
- Sleet, freezing rain (with potential ice accumulations), or rain may fall along/near the I-95 corridor for a period of time, reducing total snowfall amounts there.
- Heaviest snow totals: farther inland over the interior Northeast.
- High winds, downed trees/powerlines, power outages, would be a given, particularly if there is significant ice accumulation, due to the force of wind plus the weight of accumulated ice.
- Coastal flooding
- MAJOR travel disruption (airports, roads) over a wider area, given heavier snow totals inland, and potential ice accumulations.
Scenario #2: Low tracks offshore, near the coast
- Cold air (i.e., subfreezing air) remains locked in place.
- Heaviest snow and blizzard conditions along I-95 corridor. Lighter amounts in the interior Northeast. Somewhat similar to Christmas Weekend blizzard.
- High winds lead to downed trees, power lines, power outages and coastal flooding.
- MAJOR travel disruption (airports, roads)!
If the offshore low track (scenario #2) pans out and the low is too far out to sea, then the I-95 corridor may only see a glancing blow of snow and wind. The exception may be eastern New England.
What we know now:
Peak storm impact in Northeast: Wednesday through early Thursday
It is far too soon to precisely forecast snow/ice totals for any given city/location.
However, this storm has the potential to dump at least 1 foot of snow over a large swath of the Northeast, with much higher totals exceeding 20" in spots.
High winds, downed trees/powerlines, and power outages are possible Wednesday into Thursday, particularly near the coast.