Hello, I'm a fairly new PPL and was looking for better weather resources than the usual ones. Before a flight I get my outlook and standard briefings from 1800wxbrief and/or ForeFlight like a good pilot, and they're great for short-range, especially ForeFlight, but they aren't as great for longer-range planning. Right now, I'm flying for fun, not looking to make a career out of flying, but I'll get my commercial certificate one day and if anything jumps out at me then great, I'm open to changing. But for now, I'm basically hunting for VFR days to fly for fun, or go somewhere without tight constraints. With that, long range forecasting seems to be an area that's lacking, or at least I'm lacking in resources if they're out there. For more background about me, I'm a storm chaser so long-range weather models and forecasts are something I'm quite comfortable with. My two favorite sites are the College of Dupage (COD) and Pivotal Weather (I can't link them yet). However, those and other similar sites are not really geared toward what we as pilots need for aviation. They have a lot of "aggregate" fields, but they're geared toward severe weather. Here's a good example from today. I'm looking at the coming week on those sites and I select "cloud cover" as my display. However, it doesn't show ceilings. If the model displays "overcast" that could mean anything from 100ft ceilings to 7000ft ceilings. The best I can do is go over to the temperature page and dewpoint page and do the calculation from the dewpoint spread we all learned in ground school. Needless to say, this is tedious. Now, as a storm chaser, I know how much things can change in the long range. A system shifting by as little as six hours can be the difference between LIFR and CAVU. But, having this information available to see the trends is what I'm interested in. If there's four days of forecasts of 2000ft ceilings, I probably shouldn't plan on flying that day. Do these resources exist somehwere that I just haven't found yet? Thank you!