PowellVolz Posted May 5, 2016 Share Posted May 5, 2016 Got a nice panoramic view of a shelf cloud moving into N Knox Co around 8pm with that 2nd line of showers. It bowed out just a bit right before it got to me. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 5, 2016 Author Share Posted May 5, 2016 Got a nice panoramic view of a shelf cloud moving into N Knox Co around 8pm with that 2nd line of showers. It bowed out just a bit right before it got to me. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Nice,get much gust out of that? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stovepipe Posted May 5, 2016 Share Posted May 5, 2016 Got a nice panoramic view of a shelf cloud moving into N Knox Co around 8pm with that 2nd line of showers. It bowed out just a bit right before it got to me. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Very cool photo, thanks for sharing that! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nrgjeff Posted May 5, 2016 Share Posted May 5, 2016 Love the picture. Nice shelfie! System yesterday would have been a great northwest flow event in June. 850 winds were southwest, but it was northwest upstairs yielding great turning with height. With June dewpoints we would have been rockin' on Rocky Top! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stovepipe Posted May 5, 2016 Share Posted May 5, 2016 Love the picture. Nice shelfie! System yesterday would have been a great northwest flow event in June. 850 winds were southwest, but it was northwest upstairs yielding great turning with height. With June dewpoints we would have been rockin' on Rocky Top! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 6, 2016 Author Share Posted May 6, 2016 Still looks like the best severe threat is Tuesday,Bigger threat should be around the western valley where somewhat better wind shear should be.Instability looks good though for some possible strong storms even into the Mid Valley Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 7, 2016 Author Share Posted May 7, 2016 NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE NASHVILLE TN310 PM CDT SAT MAY 7 2016 .DISCUSSION... STRONG RIDGING TO OUR WEST AND AN UPPER LOW OVER THE UPPER GREATLAKES ARE CREATING A NW FLOW OVER MIDDLE TN. SHOWERS AND STORMSARE INITIATING DOWNSTREAM OF AN UPPER LEVEL DISTURBANCE STRETCHINGFROM NRN MO BACK TO SD. THESE SHOULD CONTINUE TO FIRE ACROSSMO/IL AND TRACK SOUTHEAST...AFFECTING CENTRAL KY AND POSSIBLYNRN/NERN MIDDLE TN TONIGHT. THE RIDGE WEAKENS A BIT OVERNIGHT ANDTHE HRRR SHOWS MORE CONVECTION TRACKING ACROSS OUR NERN HALF OFTHE CWA AS A RESULT. BUT GIVEN OUR DRY WESTERLY FLOW AT THE SFCWOULD THINK MOST ACTIVITY WOULD STAY TO OUR NORTH ANDEAST...POSSIBLY CLIPPING A FEW OF OUR NERN COUNTIES. KEPT SLIGHTCHC POPS OVERNIGHT AND ALL OTHER AREAS DRY. A DEEP UPPER LOW OVER THE SW CONUS BEGINS TO KICK OUT TO THE EASTON SUNDAY...PUSHING THE AFOREMENTIONED RIDGE OVERHEAD AND KEEPINGUS MOSTLY DRY UNTIL MONDAY NIGHT. WITH RETURN FLOW ON SUNDAY...DONOT SEE ANY REASON TO NOT GO MID 80S FOR HIGHS SO WILL BUMP THOSECURRENT FORECAST TEMPS FOR SUNDAY UP A FEW DEGREES. THAT FLOW WILLCONTINUE INTO MONDAY WITH ADDITIONAL CLOUD COVER AROUND...BUTSTILL THINK LOW 80S FOR HIGHS ON AVERAGE WILL BE MET. THEREAFTER...THE UPPER LOW OVER THE SW CONUS WILL TRACK TOWARDSTHE DAKOTAS...SWINGING A LOBE OF ENERGY ACROSS THE MID-MS VALLEYMON NIGHT. MODELS INDICATE A POSSIBLE CONVECTIVE COMPLEX MONDAYNIGHT INTO TUESDAY MORNING MOVING FROM SW TO NE ACROSS WRNTN...MAYBE CLIPPING AREAS OF MIDDLE TN ALONG AND WEST OF I-65.FORECAST SFC CAPE IS FAIR BUT THE DEEP LAYER SHEAR IS GOOD(40-50KT). IF SFC CAPE IS REALIZED EARLY TUESDAY MORNING...LOOKSLIKE A DECENT SHOT AT STRONG-SEVERE STORMS. THE FORCING GETS MESSYON WEDNESDAY BUT THE ENVIRONMENT STAYS UNSTABLE SO MAY HAVE ASTRONG-SEVERE STORM THREAT THROUGH WEDNESDAY AS WELL. WITHOUT ASTRONG FORCING MECHANISM OVERHEAD OTHER THAN HEATING OF THEDAY...WILL JUST KEEP CHC POPS AROUND. ON THURSDAY A MOREPROGRESSIVE UPPER LOW AND ITS ASSOCIATED COLD FRONT FROM THE PACNW PUSHES THROUGH MIDDLE TN. THIS LOOKS LIKE ANOTHER CHC FORPOSSIBLE STRONG-SEVERE STORMS WITH THE FROPA THURSDAY BUT THATWILL DEPEND ON THE TIMING OF THE FRONTAL PASSAGE AND HEATING OFTHE DAY. SHOULD BE DRY BEHIND THAT FRONT WITH TEMPS STAYING MILD. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 7, 2016 Author Share Posted May 7, 2016 ATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE MEMPHIS TN305 PM CDT SAT MAY 7 2016 .DISCUSSION... SKIES REMAIN SUNNY OVER THE FORECAST AREA AS TEMPERATURES HAVEWARMED INTO THE LOW TO MID 80S. HIGH PRESSURE WAS NEAR NEW ORLEANSLOUISIANA THIS AFTERNOON. THE HIGH WILL DRIFT EAST ACROSS THE GULFOF MEXICO TONIGHT. THIS WILL MEAN MORE DRY WEATHER FOR TONIGHTWITH TEMPERATURES REMAINING FAIRLY MILD AS LOWS SUNDAY MORNINGWILL BE IN THE UPPER 50S TO LOWER 60S. SUNDAY WILL BE ANOTHER NICEDAY WITH DRY WEATHER AND WARM TEMPERATURES AS HIGHS WILL BE IN THELOW TO MID 80S. A LARGE STORM SYSTEM WILL BE MOVING OUT OF THE ROCKIES AND INTOTHE PLAINS SUNDAY. BY SUNDAY EVENING LOW PRESSURE WILL BE OVERCENTRAL KANSAS WITH A COLD FRONT EXTENDING SOUTH INTO WESTERNOKLAHOMA AND WEST TEXAS. SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS ARE EXPECTEDTO DEVELOP AHEAD OF THE FRONT AND SOME OF THIS ACTIVITY WESTERNSECTIONS OF THE FORECAST AREA. TEMPERATURES WILL REMAIN MILD WITHLOWS MONDAY MORNING IN THE LOW TO MID 60S. ON MONDAY...THE COLD FRONT WILL MOVE SLOWLY EAST. ANOTHER ROUND OFTHUNDERSTORMS SHOULD DEVELOP AHEAD OF THE FRONT AND THIS ROUNDWILL HAVE A BETTER CHANCE OF MOVING ACROSS THE ENTIRE FORECASTAREA. SPC DOES HAVE MUCH OF ARKANSAS IN A SLIGHT RISK FOR SEVEREWEATHER ON MONDAY AND MONDAY NIGHT WITH LARGE HAIL AND DAMAGINGWINDS AS THE MAIN THREATS. TEMPERATURES WILL BE A LITTLE COOLERMONDAY WITH MORE CLOUDS AND A BETTER CHANCE OF RAIN AS HIGHS WILLBE IN THE MID TO UPPER 70S. MONDAY NIGHT SHOULD BE THE MOSTLIKELY TIME FOR THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE FORECAST AREA. ON TUESDAY...THE COLD FRONT WILL STILL BE IN CENTRAL OKLAHOMA ANDNORTHWEST TEXAS. ANOTHER ROUND OF THUNDERSTORMS WILL DEVELOP AHEADOF THE FRONT AND MOVE ACROSS THE FORECAST AREA TUESDAY AND TUESDAYNIGHT. BY WEDNESDAY...THE COLD FRONT WILL BE STARTING TO MOVE INTONORTHWEST ARKANSAS WITH MORE THUNDERSTORMS EXPECTED ACROSS THEFORECAST AREA WEDNESDAY AND WEDNESDAY NIGHT. BY THURSDAY...THE COLD FRONT WILL FINALLY MAKES ITS WAY INTO THEFORECAST AREA AND WEAKEN. THE RESULT WILL BE MORE THUNDERSTORMS ONTHURSDAY WITH A SMALLER CHANCE ON THURSDAY NIGHT. BY FRIDAY THECOLD FRONT WILL HAVE MOVED SOUTH OF THE REGION WITH HIGH PRESSUREBRIEFLY BUILDING INTO THE FORECAST AREA. THIS WILL BRING DRYWEATHER ON FRIDAY WITH SOMEWHAT COOLER TEMPERATURES. A NEW COLD FRONT WILL MOVE INTO THE OHIO VALLEY AND MIDMISSISSIPPI VALLEY FRIDAY NIGHT AND NEXT SATURDAY. THIS WILL MEANANOTHER ROUND OF THUNDERSTORMS WILL BE POSSIBLE DURING THE PERIOD. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 7, 2016 Author Share Posted May 7, 2016 Possibly a decent system in the long range,least it doesn't look to go into the high plains like this system,right now anyways Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PowellVolz Posted May 7, 2016 Share Posted May 7, 2016 Nice,get much gust out of that? No.... Maybe 25 mph. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 7, 2016 Author Share Posted May 7, 2016 No.... Maybe 25 mph. Nice pic though,thanks for sharing.Must have been some nice wind squall then before it got to you,seems like it to me anyways,or to the east of you,looking at the pic Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 8, 2016 Author Share Posted May 8, 2016 Best severe chance still looks to be in the western parts of the Valley, Tuesday for this time frame,best wind shear is in this part and it diminishes somewhat the further east you go.Though some slight VBV,the main threat should be wind and hail right now,but a tornado COULD be possible. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 8, 2016 Author Share Posted May 8, 2016 Reed Timmer and his wife filmed some awesome footage of the Colorado tornado yesterday,brave !!..lol https://twitter.com/reedtimmerTVN Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 8, 2016 Author Share Posted May 8, 2016 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 9, 2016 Author Share Posted May 9, 2016 NAM showing some better bulk sheer into Mid Valley,probably not going to be right but it does show it,hailer anyways maybe.Don't see no VBV Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 9, 2016 Author Share Posted May 9, 2016 DAY 2 CONVECTIVE OUTLOOK NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK 1247 AM CDT MON MAY 09 2016 VALID 101200Z - 111200Z ...THERE IS A SLGT RISK OF SVR TSTMS TUESDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING ACROSS PARTS OF THE MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI INTO LOWER OHIO VALLEYS... ...THERE IS A SLGT RISK OF SVR TSTMS ACROSS THE TEXAS HILL COUNTRY AND ADJACENT PORTIONS OF THE EDWARDS PLATEAU... ...THERE IS A MRGL RISK OF SVR TSTMS ACROSS SURROUNDING AREAS OF SOUTH CENTRAL TEXAS... ...THERE IS A MRGL RISK OF SVR TSTMS ACROSS PARTS OF THE OZARK PLATEAU...LOWER MISSOURI VALLEY AND CENTRAL PLAINS... ...SUMMARY... A FEW SEVERE STORMS ARE POSSIBLE TUESDAY ACROSS PARTS OF THE MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI AND LOWER OHIO VALLEYS...AND AROUND THE HILL COUNTRY OF TEXAS. STRONG TO SEVERE STORMS ALSO APPEAR POSSIBLE ACROSS PARTS OF THE CENTRAL PLAINS. ...SYNOPSIS... IN THE WAKE OF THE WEAKENING CLOSED LOW AND ASSOCIATED UPPER TROUGHING NOW EMERGING FROM THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST...A SOUTHERLY LOW-LEVEL RETURN FLOW APPEARS LIKELY TO PERSIST OFF THE WESTERN GULF OF MEXICO INTO AND THROUGH THIS PERIOD. THIS WILL CONTRIBUTE TO FURTHER MOISTENING OF THE BOUNDARY LAYER ACROSS THE SOUTHEASTERN PLAINS...OZARK PLATEAU AND LOWER/MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...WHERE SURFACE DEW POINTS MAY INCREASE THROUGH THE UPPER 60S TO AROUND 70F. IN ADDITION TO ADVECTING WESTWARD ACROSS PARTS OF THE RIO GRANDE VALLEY AND SOUTHERN PLAINS...INCREASING MOISTURE APPEARS LIKELY TO WORK ITS WAY INTO THE LOWER OHIO VALLEY...AIDED BY A MODEST LINGERING WEST SOUTHWESTERLY LOW-LEVEL JET. THIS LOW-LEVEL JET /AROUND 30 KT AT 850 MB/ IS EXPECTED TO BE MAINTAINED FROM PORTIONS OF THE OZARK PLATEAU INTO THE LOWER OHIO VALLEY THROUGH MUCH OF THE DAY TUESDAY...AS REMNANT UPPER TROUGHING TURNS EASTWARD THROUGH THE OHIO VALLEY. THIS IS EXPECTED TO OCCUR AS SHORT WAVE RIDGING BUILDS NORTHEASTWARD ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS/OZARK PLATEAU AND MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...IN ADVANCE OF LARGER-SCALE UPPER TROUGHING FORECAST TO GRADUALLY TURN EAST OF THE ROCKIES. THIS LATTER DEVELOPMENT MAY BE SOMEWHAT PIECE-MEAL...WITH AN EMBEDDED CLOSED LOW FORECAST TO TURN NORTHEAST OF THE NORTHERN ROCKIES THROUGH THE NORTH DAKOTA INTERNATIONAL BORDER AREA BY LATE TUESDAY NIGHT...WHILE A SIGNIFICANT UPSTREAM SHORT WAVE IMPULSE GRADUALLY DIGS ACROSS THE EASTERN GREAT BASIN AND WYOMING/COLORADO ROCKIES. CONSIDERABLE WEAKENING OF THE STRONG HIGH-LEVEL JET NOW PROPAGATING ACROSS NORTHERN MEXICO AND THE RIO GRANDE VALLEY INTO THE SOUTHERN PLAINS IS EXPECTED. A CORRESPONDING WEAKENING OF LOWER/MID TROPOSPHERIC FLOW MAY ALSO OCCUR ACROSS MUCH OF THE GULF COAST REGION AND ADJACENT PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHERN PLAINS. HOWEVER...WITH THE APPROACH OF THE GREAT BASIN/ROCKIES IMPULSE...A MODEST /30-40+ KT AT 850 MB/ LOW-LEVEL JET MAY DEVELOP TUESDAY NIGHT FROM THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS INTO THE CENTRAL PLAINS...GENERALLY BENEATH A PLUME OF WARM AND MORE STRONGLY CAPPING ELEVATED MIXED LAYER. ...LOWER OHIO VALLEY REGION... WEAKENING CONVECTION EXPECTED TO OVERSPREAD THE REGION EARLY IN THE PERIOD...COUPLED WITH INSOLATION AND LOWER/MID TROPOSPHERIC WARM ADVECTION IN ITS WAKE...MAY CONTRIBUTE TO A STRENGTHENING BAROCLINIC ZONE ACROSS THE REGION BY LATE AFTERNOON. THIS COULD PROVIDE THE FOCUS FOR RENEWED THUNDERSTORM DEVELOPMENT...PERHAPS SUPPORTED BY REMNANT MID-LEVEL FORCING FOR ASCENT ON THE SOUTHWESTERN PERIPHERY OF UPPER TROUGHING SHIFTING THROUGH THE OHIO VALLEY. GIVEN DESTABILIZATION ASSOCIATED WITH THE CONTINUING INFLUX OF LOW-LEVEL MOISTURE...AND SHEAR/MOMENTUM ASSOCIATED WITH A REMNANT BELT OF 30-40 KT WESTERLY LOWER/MID TROPOSPHERIC FLOW...THE ENVIRONMENT MAY BECOME CONDUCIVE TO SEVERE STORM DEVELOPMENT. THE EVOLUTION OF AN ORGANIZED MESOSCALE CONVECTIVE SYSTEM APPEARS POSSIBLE BY TUESDAY EVENING...WITH A TENDENCY TO PROPAGATE EAST SOUTHEASTWARD ALONG THE FRONTAL ZONE. ...TEXAS HILL COUNTRY AND ADJACENT EDWARDS PLATEAU... MID/UPPER FORCING FOR CONVECTIVE DEVELOPMENT REMAINS UNCLEAR...BUT MODELS SUGGEST THAT SCATTERED THUNDERSTORMS WILL DEVELOP DURING THE LATE AFTERNOON AND EVENING. THIS MAY BE AIDED BY OROGRAPHY...AND PERHAPS FORCING ASSOCIATED WITH A SUBTLE IMPULSE WITHIN THE WEAKENING HIGH-LEVEL JET. EVEN WITH RATHER WEAK LOW/MID-LEVEL FLOW...HIGH-LEVEL FLOW MAY REMAIN AROUND 50+ KT ACROSS THE REGION...CONTRIBUTING TO THE POTENTIAL FOR SUPERCELLS. WITH HEATING...LARGE CAPE IS EXPECTED TO DEVELOP BENEATH STEEP MID-LEVEL LAPSE RATES...AND THE ENVIRONMENT SHOULD BE CONDUCIVE TO LARGE HAIL AND AT LEAST LOCALIZED STRONG SURFACE GUSTS. ...CENTRAL PLAINS... IN ADVANCE OF A COLD FRONT ASSOCIATED WITH UPPER TROUGHING PROGRESSING EAST OF THE ROCKIES...FORCING FOR ASCENT MAY CONTRIBUTE TO HIGH-BASED STORM DEVELOPMENT ACROSS PARTS OF THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS LATE TUESDAY AFTERNOON. STRONGEST ACTIVITY MAY BECOME FOCUSED ON THE LEADING EDGE OF THE PLUME OF WARMER ELEVATED MIXED-LAYER AIR...WHICH MAY TEND TO SPREAD EAST NORTHEASTWARD ACROSS PARTS OF SOUTHERN NEBRASKA/NORTHERN KANSAS TUESDAY NIGHT. THE ENVIRONMENT PROBABLY WILL BE CONDUCIVE TO THE RISK FOR LOCALLY STRONG SURFACE GUSTS AND PERHAPS SOME MARGINALLY SEVERE HAIL IN INITIAL ACTIVITY ACROSS THE HIGH PLAINS. AFTER DARK...EASTWARD TOWARD THE MISSOURI VALLEY...SEVERE WEATHER POTENTIAL REMAINS MORE UNCLEAR DUE TO THE APPARENT LACK OF STRONGER INSTABILITY CURRENTLY EXPECTED. 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nrgjeff Posted May 10, 2016 Share Posted May 10, 2016 Well the best action today looks like up on the Ohio River or northern Kentucky. MCS is coming out of Missouri and the southern tip of Illinois. It should strengthen this afternoon along the warm front. Meanwhile a Tennessee outflow boundary is wasted due to no upper air support... Posted this answering a question in Central/West and figured I should share here for general severe weather forecasting: Large CAPE with high pressure overhead will not lead to storms, just hot in summer. Big bubble no trouble, we say. A front and especially low pressure in the area with high CAPE could lead to storms. Model QPF has also improved in recent years, but models can struggle both directions with the cap. Whether storms will be severe also depends on what is going on upstairs. I also look at jet stream winds, 500 mb PVA, and a low level jet at 850/925 mb. If they are present, with turning, odds of severe increase. Severe type depends on details at all levels such as 700 mb etc. In the short term hodographs can help. Helicity is another great index to check in the shorter term say day 0-2. It is another way of looking at the turning with height and strength of wind fields. EHI energy helicity index combines it with CAPE. Same day one can discern outflow boundaries, mesolows, dry line bulges (pre-frontal troughs South) and other mesoscale features. Track them using visible satellite and surface charts. One can anticipate short-waves with water vapor satellite and look at wind profilers upstream. SPC talks about mesoscale feature more in mesoscale discussions than outlooks. Speaking of them, despite some gnashing of teeth here, SPC does pretty well. Local Weather Service Area Forecast Discussions are packed with information too. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 10, 2016 Author Share Posted May 10, 2016 Well the best action today looks like up on the Ohio River or northern Kentucky. MCS is coming out of Missouri and the southern tip of Illinois. It should strengthen this afternoon along the warm front. Meanwhile a Tennessee outflow boundary is wasted due to no upper air support... Posted this answering a question in Central/West and figured I should share here for general severe weather forecasting: Large CAPE with high pressure overhead will not lead to storms, just hot in summer. Big bubble no trouble, we say. A front and especially low pressure in the area with high CAPE could lead to storms. Model QPF has also improved in recent years, but models can struggle both directions with the cap. Whether storms will be severe also depends on what is going on upstairs. I also look at jet stream winds, 500 mb PVA, and a low level jet at 850/925 mb. If they are present, with turning, odds of severe increase. Severe type depends on details at all levels such as 700 mb etc. In the short term hodographs can help. Helicity is another great index to check in the shorter term say day 0-2. It is another way of looking at the turning with height and strength of wind fields. EHI energy helicity index combines it with CAPE. Same day one can discern outflow boundaries, mesolows, dry line bulges (pre-frontal troughs South) and other mesoscale features. Track them using visible satellite and surface charts. One can anticipate short-waves with water vapor satellite and look at wind profilers upstream. SPC talks about mesoscale feature more in mesoscale discussions than outlooks. Speaking of them, despite some gnashing of teeth here, SPC does pretty well. Local Weather Service Area Forecast Discussions are packed with information too. That was a nice video David posted in that sub Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nrgjeff Posted May 10, 2016 Share Posted May 10, 2016 That was a nice video David posted in that sub Yes the video is excellent. All those emotions are very real, from concern for others to jubilation at the intercept. Also the Top 5 video shows incredible motion. The cyclical nature of that supercell with storm speed the same as the speed the boundary retreats was textbook and somewhat rare. It is arguably better than riding a stationary boundary. I think the storm creates the environment; so, the speeds matching is a little more than coincidence. Some of the big ones April 27, 2011 did the same thing. Little voice in me says I should have taken my chase trip this sequence. However, regardless of model mayhem, I think the Plains will tee up again in late May. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 11, 2016 Author Share Posted May 11, 2016 Good light show on going to the N of us Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John1122 Posted May 11, 2016 Share Posted May 11, 2016 Huge hailers across Southern Kentucky earlier, some softball sized stuff possible at one point earlier. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rbowman Posted May 11, 2016 Share Posted May 11, 2016 I just reported 2 inch hail in Hermitage to the Skywarn number. Biggest hail I've ever seen here! Sent from my LG-H901 using Tapatalk Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 11, 2016 Author Share Posted May 11, 2016 Saw all the storms in Ky,few tornadoes.That was an an impressive cell over Hermitage that was close to where that pic i posted above,seen the hail marker.It's still going. left a 3" marker S of Lebanon Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nrgjeff Posted May 11, 2016 Share Posted May 11, 2016 Kentucky went all Great Plains yesterday. Tornado pics and video feature nice contrast, great visibility, and intense motion. Time and time again once the Plains gets its act together, action tends to spread downstream through Illinois into Kentucky. Models and humans tend to weaken it on the way east. However in May the parameters tend to hold together in spite of forecast bias. Most legendary Plains sequences have action in the Midwest and/or Midsouth also. This year I favor the Midwest. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 11, 2016 Author Share Posted May 11, 2016 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chinook Posted May 11, 2016 Share Posted May 11, 2016 I heard that there was 6" of rain and major flooding (flash flooding?) north of Nashville Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 11, 2016 Author Share Posted May 11, 2016 I heard that there was 6" of rain and major flooding (flash flooding?) north of Nashville Think that was Bethpage/Hartsville /Westmoreland area http://forecast.weather.gov/product.php?site=NWS&issuedby=OHX&product=LSR&format=CI&version=1&glossary=1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 12, 2016 Author Share Posted May 12, 2016 DAY 1 CONVECTIVE OUTLOOK NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK 0752 AM CDT THU MAY 12 2016 VALID 121300Z - 131200Z ...THERE IS A SLGT RISK OF SVR TSTMS PORTIONS MID SOUTH... ...THERE IS A MRGL RISK OF SVR TSTMS ELSEWHERE FROM PORTIONS S TX TO CAROLINAS AND LAKE ERIE VICINITY... ...SUMMARY... A FEW STRONG TO SEVERE STORMS WILL BE POSSIBLE FROM SOUTHEAST LOWER MICHIGAN THROUGH THE OHIO AND TENNESSEE VALLEYS TO THE ARKLAMISS AND ARKLATEX REGIONS. ADDITIONAL STRONG TO SEVERE STORMS WILL BE POSSIBLE ACROSS SOUTHERN VIRGINIA AND THE CAROLINAS. --- TECHNICAL DISCUSSION --- ...SYNOPSIS... PROGRESSIVE UPPER-AIR PATTERN WILL EXIST OVER CONUS...CHARACTERIZED BROADLY BY... 1. AMPLIFYING/EWD-MOVING RIDGE ACROSS PAC COAST REGION...AND DOWNSTREAM... 2. SERIES OF SHORTWAVES TRAVERSING CYCLONIC-FLOW BELT SW-SE OF 500-MB CYCLONE NOW CENTERED OVER SERN AB. THAT CYCLONE SHOULD MOVE ONLY VERY SLOWLY EWD TO ADJOINING PARTS OF NWRN ONT THROUGH PERIOD. LEADING SHORTWAVE TROUGH -- NOW LOCATED FROM CENTRAL IA SWWD ACROSS ERN KS TO NERN NM -- WILL WEAKEN AS NRN PART ACCELERATES NEWD ACROSS UPPER MI AND LS. SRN PART WILL MERGE WITH UPSTREAM TROUGH...NOW EVIDENT IN MOISTURE-CHANNEL IMAGERY FROM SERN ND SSWWD TO NWRN KS. COMBINED PERTURBATION THEN SHOULD REACH MID/UPPER MS VALLEY BY 00Z...PIVOTING EWD TO LOWER MI...WRN OH...WRN TN AND NRN AL BY END OF PERIOD. AT SFC...COLD FRONT WAS ANALYZED AT 11Z FROM DIFFUSE OCCLUSION AREA OVER NRN IL/SRN WI...SSWWD OVER SRN MO THEN ARCHING SWWD ACROSS NWRN AR...SERN OK...AND TX PERMIAN BASIN. SEVERAL OUTFLOW BOUNDARIES WERE EVIDENT AHEAD OF COLD FRONT FROM TX TO MID SOUTH...INCLUDING ONE FROM PRIOR CONVECTION NOW LOCATED FROM NERN AR EWD ACROSS MID TN. BY 00Z...COLD FRONT SHOULD MOVE TO WRN INDIANA...WRN TN...NWRN LA AND LOWER PECOS RIVER REGION OF SW TX. ...LOWER GREAT LAKES TO MID SOUTH... INTERMITTENTLY SVR MCS WITH WELL-DEVELOPED COLD POOL WAS APPARENT OVER E-CENTRAL AR...AND SHOULD MOVE INTO DESTABILIZING AIR MASS ACROSS MID SOUTH TODAY WITH PRIMARY THREAT BEING DAMAGING GUSTS. MAIN CORRIDOR OF INTEREST FOR RELATIVELY CONCENTRATED/ORGANIZED SVR POTENTIAL NOW APPEARS TO BE FROM THAT COMPLEX EWD ACROSS TN AND PERHAPS PARTS OF ADJOINING STATES. THIS CORRIDOR IS MARKED BY AFOREMENTIONED...NEARLY E-W OUTFLOW BOUNDARY ACTING IN SEVERAL SUPPORTIVE CAPACITIES...INCLUDING... 1. NRN BOUND FOR RELATIVELY RICH THETAE OF GULF AIR MASS...CHARACTERIZED BY SFC DEW POINTS MID-UPPER 60S F. THIS WILL SUPPORT 1500-2000 J/KG MLCAPE. 2. LOW-LEVEL CONVERGENCE/LIFT ZONE AND RELATED FOCUS FOR FORWARD PROPAGATION AND CONTINUED LEADING-EDGE DEVELOPMENT THAT MAY HELP TO RE-INTENSIFY/MAINTAIN MCS...AS WELL AS SUPPORT ADDITIONAL DEVELOPMENT E OF THAT ACTIVITY. MCV RELATED TO THAT CONVECTION WAS APPARENT IN COMPOSITE- REFLECTIVITY ANIMATIONS OVER NRN AR...AND SHOULD PIVOT EWD TO ENEWD TODAY TO PROVIDE REGIONALLY ENHANCED FLOW ALOFT AND LARGE-SCALE LIFT IN SUPPORT OF CONVECTIVE POTENTIAL AS WELL. AIR MASS FARTHER N WILL BE CHARACTERIZED BY WEAKER LOW-LEVEL AND DEEP-LAYER LAPSE RATES...AS WELL AS SMALLER VALUES OF BOUNDARY-LAYER THETAE. HOWEVER...MRGL DEEP SHEAR WILL DEVELOP FOR ISOLATED TO SCATTERED TSTMS...INCLUDING A FEW ORGANIZED MULTICELLS CAPABLE OF HAIL/GUSTS NEAR SVR LEVELS. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PowellVolz Posted May 12, 2016 Share Posted May 12, 2016 Had a storm last night that produced a 42mph gust and dime/nickel size hail. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jaxjagman Posted May 12, 2016 Author Share Posted May 12, 2016 Had a storm last night that produced a 42mph gust and dime/nickel size hail. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk We might do decent here far as rain,some MCS look like they might come through before the front.We haven't seen much of anything the last several days here Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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