Extremeweatherguy wrote: This afternoon's run of the JMA has temps. below 0C at 200mb, 500mb, 700mb, 850mb and 900mb in 120 hrs. What would this mean? I just hope that we either get a good shot of cold next week, but if not, then I hope the severe threat for Monday plays out. I need to see SOME kind of extreme weather to keep me going. This boring dry, sunny, warm weather has been here for too long.

Well...the day our temps at 200 are above 0C is the day all life on this planet ceases
500mb temps below 0C is always occuring except at rare instances in the heat of summer...
700mb...normal freezing level in the winter...
850mb is 5000' and 900mb is 3000'. You have to know what is going on in the lower 100mb or so to be able to determing the snow layers. Actually...you have to know the entire column...not just layers.
1000mb:-2.3c
925mb:-0.2c
850mb:-0.3c
800mb:-1.4C
700mb:-5.7C
Looks like it should snow, right? But you still can't tell because in this example, you could have a layer from 900mb-855mb above freezing. That would be thick enough to melt the snow and give you sleet or freezing rain. That's why you have to look at a forecast skew-t.
A good place to do it (when you don't have DoD programs or NWS programs) is at teh ARL.
http://www.arl.noaa.gov/ready/cmet.html
Go to the link, type in your ICAO (3 letters for US...like IAH, HOU) or Lat/Long...click Continue....choose sounding...GFS or whichever model...and go from there.
That way you can get the exact profile of the atmosphere and you will know if it supports snow.
Remember:
1) If freezing level is >1200' AGL...rain or freezing rain (depending on sfc temp)
2) If layer (if below freezing at sfc and above sfc...but a layer is above freezing aloft) is 700-1200' thick but temp not greater than 3C in the layer...snow or snow grains are likely. If layer is 700-1200' thick and temp is greater than 3C within the layer, complete melt is likely and you will get sleet if there is a freezing layer of 2000' of so beneath the warm layer. Otherwise it falls as freezing rain.
3) If the warm layer is <700' thick and temp is greater than 3C, snow grains, if lower than 3C, likely to remain snow.
There are other rules but there are good guidlines.