NZUS97 KILN 110838 RWTDAY .LONG TERM /MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY/... Low pressure system will be lifting north up the Appalachians Monday night, pushed by a strong southwest flow on the east side of an upper trough. Moisture will be transported on a long fetch from the Gulf of Mexico, and though heaviest precip will stay well to the east under deeper moisture and stronger lift, there should be enough forcing and moisture to produce a couple of tenths precip in the ILN area. Precip starting as rain will change to snow as temps fall to freezing due to cold advection, diurnal and dynamic cooling. Expect snow amounts in the 1 to 2 inch range in northern locations, with under an inch farther south where temperature profiles will be less favorable for snow crystal development. Precip will diminish to snow and rain showers Tuesday as the system departs quickly. Surface high pressure forming under a westerly flow aloft will then provide dry conditions on Wednesday. Models are in fairly good agreement with respect to the next low due to arrive Thursday. Current indications are that precip starting as snow will transition to rain by Thursday afternoon. Any change in track may result in differing precip types, though significant winter precip appears unlikely at this time with models showing lower tropospheric thicknesses too warm for snow to be prevalent. High pressure may follow with dry weather on Friday. A few snow and rain showers could develop Saturday on a chilly cyclonic flow off the Great Lakes. Temperatures staying below normal will vary a bit due to advection associated with the low pressure systems. Northerly flow around the first low will provide highs in the 30s Tuesday and Wednesday. There could be a modest rise to the 40s Thursday and Friday under warm advection and increasing geopotential heights. Readings may slide back to around 40 Saturday during the next round of cold advection. &&