Quincy Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 3 hours ago, Indystorm said: And in some action for Good Friday night.... BULLETIN - EAS ACTIVATION REQUESTED SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WARNING NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SAN ANGELO TX 855 PM CDT FRI APR 10 2020 THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN SAN ANGELO HAS ISSUED A * SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WARNING FOR... NORTH CENTRAL AND NORTHEASTERN CROCKETT COUNTY IN WEST CENTRAL TEXAS... * UNTIL 1000 PM CDT. * AT 854 PM CDT, A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WAS LOCATED 11 MILES SOUTH OF REAGAN COUNTY AIRPORT, OR 11 MILES SOUTHWEST OF BIG LAKE, MOVING EAST AT 25 MPH. THIS IS A VERY DANGEROUS STORM. HAZARD...BASEBALL SIZE HAIL AND 60 MPH WIND GUSTS. SOURCE...RADAR INDICATED. IMPACT...PEOPLE AND ANIMALS OUTDOORS WILL BE SEVERELY INJURED. EXPECT SHATTERED WINDOWS, EXTENSIVE DAMAGE TO ROOFS, SIDING, AND VEHICLES. * THIS SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WILL REMAIN OVER MAINLY RURAL AREAS OF NORTHEASTERN CROCKETT COUNTY, INCLUDING THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS... THE INTERSECTION OF US 190 AND HIGHWAY 163. That was quite a hail producer. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
brianc33710 Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 I can't share the new Day 2 outlook for Sunday. But, the only real expansion by the SPC is the enhanced level stretched into KY. While I did expect them to broaden the MOD to include more of AL & into TN, the delay in pulling the High Risk lever doesn't surprise me. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Calderon Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 Two things for discussion: James Spann actually thinks that the SPC will go with the High Risk next update, which seems a little too soon. But he has 40 + years of experience so I will defer to him. Also, is the Nashville, TN EF-4 the only violent tornado so far in 2020? I know that they also had an EF-3, but their NWS office did find some EF-4 damage.Yes. Nashville was an EF3, Cookeville was the EF4. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sydney Claridge Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 The looming question for myself and others in north-central Texas is whether convection will evolve to the west and create a cold pool over the area today. Several models are now suggesting that this will not happen; out of the five CAMs available on the Pivotal Weather website only the NAM3k is going with a cold-pool solution. Those other CAMs get the DFW Metroplex into a moist, unstable atmosphere from about 1pm (18z) onwards. The NAM3k had convection going up around Midland at about this time, but observations show that this has not happened yet. I will definitely be watching how widespread any convection to the west may develop this morning. If a cold pool fails to develop and the afternoon temperatures get well into the 70s, then I would not be surprised if a more substantial severe weather threat evolves in my area later today. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
janetjanet998 Posted April 11, 2020 Author Share Posted April 11, 2020 AY 1 CONVECTIVE OUTLOOK NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK 0743 AM CDT SAT APR 11 2020 VALID 111300Z - 121200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON INTO TONIGHT FROM NORTHWEST AND CENTRAL TX EASTWARD TO EAST CENTRAL TX... ..SUMMARY SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ARE EXPECTED ACROSS MUCH OF THE SOUTHERN PLAINS, WITH THE GREATEST THREAT THIS AFTERNOON INTO EARLY SUNDAY MORNING. LARGE HAIL, DAMAGING WIND, AND A COUPLE OF TORNADOES WILL BE THE PRIMARY THREATS. ..SOUTHERN PLAINS THROUGH TONIGHT A CLOSED MIDLEVEL LOW OVER THE LOWER CO RIVER VALLEY WILL MOVE EASTWARD TODAY ALONG THE SOUTHERN AZ BORDER. THE CLOSED LOW WILL BEGIN TO EVOLVE INTO AN OPEN WAVE AND ACCELERATE EASTWARD TO WEST TX BY EARLY SUNDAY, IN RESPONSE TO AN UPSTREAM TROUGH DIGGING SOUTH-SOUTHEASTWARD FROM SOUTHERN BC. AT THE SURFACE, A LEE CYCLONE IS EXPECTED TO CONSOLIDATE NEAR THE KS/CO BORDER THIS AFTERNOON/EVENING. THE LEE CYCLONE WILL INDUCE STRENGTHENING SOUTHERLY LOW-LEVEL FLOW AND NORTHWARD MOISTURE TRANSPORT ACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS, AS THE REMNANT FRONT NEAR THE TX COAST RETREATS NORTHWARD THROUGH TONIGHT. ..NORTHWEST TX TODAY TO SOUTHERN AR/NORTHERN MS OVERNIGHT THE INITIAL CONVECTION TODAY IS EXPECTED TO FORM AROUND 18Z ACROSS NORTHWEST AND NORTH CENTRAL TX, IN A ZONE OF LOW-LEVEL WARM ADVECTION WITH INCREASING LOW-LEVEL MOISTURE. THE INITIAL CONVECTION WILL BE ELEVATED, WITH THE POTENTIAL TO PRODUCE AT LEAST ISOLATED LARGE HAIL GIVEN MIDLEVEL LAPSE RATES GREATER THAN 8 C/KM AND MUCAPE GREATER THAN 1500 J/KG. AS THE BOUNDARY LAYER FARTHER SOUTH IN TX WARMS DURING THE AFTERNOON, THERE WILL BE SOME POTENTIAL FOR SURFACE-BASED STORMS ALONG THE SOUTHERN FLANK OF THE MID AFTERNOON CONVECTION AND ALONG THE DRYLINE TO THE WEST. DEEP-LAYER VERTICAL SHEAR WILL BE FAVORABLE FOR SUPERCELLS, AND LOW-LEVEL HODOGRAPH CURVATURE WILL INCREASE BY LATE AFTERNOON, SUGGESTING SOME THREAT FOR A COUPLE OF TORNADOES ACROSS NORTHWEST TX. THE WARM ADVECTION STORMS ARE EXPECTED TO PERSIST THROUGH THE EVENING ACROSS SOUTHEAST OK/NORTHEAST TX, AND SHOULD REACH SOUTHERN AR/NORTHERN MS OVERNIGHT AND INTO SUNDAY MORNING, WITH A CONTINUING THREAT FOR AT LEAST ISOLATED LARGE HAIL. ..SOUTHEAST TX PANHANDLE TO CENTRAL KS THIS AFTERNOON/EVENING A SEPARATE AREA OF POTENTIAL SURFACE-BASED STORM DEVELOPMENT WILL BE ALONG A DEVELOPING DRYLINE FROM THE SOUTHEAST TX PANHANDLE ACROSS NORTHWEST OK INTO CENTRAL KS THIS AFTERNOON/EVENING. MODEST FORCING FOR ASCENT ALONG THE DRYLINE, COMBINED WITH STEEP LAPSE RATES AND EFFECTIVE BULK SHEAR OF 30-40 KT, WILL SUPPORT A THREAT FOR SUPERCELLS WITH LARGE HAIL FROM ROUGHLY 22-02Z, WITH THE SOMEWHAT GREATER LOW-LEVEL MOISTURE/BUOYANCY EXPECTED WITH SOUTHWESTWARD EXTENT. ..EDWARDS PLATEAU ACROSS CENTRAL/EAST CENTRAL TX OVERNIGHT SEVERE STORM DEVELOPMENT IS EXPECTED ACROSS THE EDWARDS PLATEAU BY ROUGHLY 06Z AS INCREASING HEIGHT FALLS/FORCING FOR ASCENT ENCOUNTER THE STRONG BUOYANCY ALONG THE WEST EDGE OF THE RICHER LOW-LEVEL MOISTURE. SUPERCELLS ARE EXPECTED INITIALLY, BUT RATHER QUICK UPSCALE GROWTH INTO A LARGE CLUSTER IS EXPECTED, AND THE CONVECTION WILL LIKELY PERSIST ACROSS CENTRAL INTO EAST CENTRAL TX ALONG THE WARM FRONT THROUGH 12Z, WITH THE STRONGEST STORMS IN CLOSEST PROXIMITY TO THE SURFACE WARM SECTOR. VERY LARGE HAIL, DAMAGING WINDS, AND A COUPLE OF TORN ADOES WILL ALL BE POSSIBLE LATE TONIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY MORNING. AY 2 CONVECTIVE OUTLOOK NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK 1259 AM CDT SAT APR 11 2020 VALID 121200Z - 131200Z ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR CENTRAL/NORTHERN LOUISIANA...SOUTHEAST ARKANSAS...MUCH OF MISSISSIPPI...WESTERN/CENTRAL ALABAMA...... ..SUMMARY AN OUTBREAK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS APPEARS LIKELY SUNDAY INTO SUNDAY NIGHT, WITH THE GREATEST THREAT EXPECTED FROM LOUISIANA THROUGH MUCH OF THE SOUTHEAST AND TENNESSEE VALLEY. STRONG TORNADOES, POTENTIALLY WIDESPREAD DAMAGING WINDS, AND LARGE HAIL ARE ALL POSSIBLE. ..SYNOPSIS THE EJECTING SHORTWAVE TROUGH INITIALLY OVER THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS ON SUNDAY MORNING IS FORECAST TO MOVE QUICKLY EASTWARD TO THE LOWER MS VALLEY BY EARLY EVENING, AND THEN ACCELERATE NORTHEASTWARD TOWARD THE OHIO VALLEY LATE SUNDAY NIGHT INTO MONDAY MORNING, AS IT BECOMES ABSORBED WITHIN AN AMPLIFYING LONGWAVE TROUGH THAT WILL ENCOMPASS NEARLY ALL THE CONUS BY 12Z MONDAY. IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE EJECTING TROUGH, A BROAD SURFACE LOW CENTERED OVER THE CENTRAL/SOUTHERN PLAINS ON SUNDAY MORNING WILL MOVE EASTWARD TO THE MID-MS VALLEY BY 00Z MONDAY, AND THEN MOVE NORTHEASTWARD AND RAPIDLY INTENSIFY INTO AN INTENSE CYCLONE OVER THE LOWER GREAT LAKES BY 12Z MONDAY. A WARM FRONT WILL SURGE NORTHWARD AHEAD OF THE LOW ACROSS THE LOWER MS VALLEY AND SOUTHEAST, WHILE A STRONG COLD FRONT WILL MOVE SOUTHWARD THROUGH MUCH OF THE PLAINS IN THE WAKE OF THE DEPARTING CYCLONE. ...EAST TX NORTHEASTWARD THROUGH MUCH OF THE SOUTHEAST AND TN VALLEY... ONE OR MORE CLUSTERS OF DEEP CONVECTION WILL LIKELY BE ONGOING AT 12Z SUNDAY MORNING SOMEWHERE OVER EAST TX AND POTENTIALLY INTO PORTIONS OF THE LOWER MS VALLEY. THE INTENSITY AND AREAL EXTENT OF ANY SUCH CLUSTERS REMAIN UNCERTAIN, BUT AMPLE SHEAR AND INSTABILITY WILL FAVOR A THREAT OF HAIL AND DAMAGING WIND WITH ANY ORGANIZED CONVECTION AT THE START OF THE PERIOD. SOME TORNADO THREAT WILL ALSO BE PRESENT SUNDAY MORNING WITH ANY SEMI-DISCRETE STORMS THAT BEGIN TO INTERACT WITH THE RICHER LOW-LEVEL MOISTURE IN THE VICINITY OF THE WARM FRONT. AS THIS CONVECTION SPREADS NORTHEASTWARD, INTENSIFICATION IS POSSIBLE INTO PORTIONS OF THE ARKLAMISS REGION, WITH AN INCREASING TORNADO THREAT IN LATE MORNING/EARLY AFTERNOON WITH ANY SURFACE-BASED STORMS, GIVEN RAPIDLY INCREASING LOW-LEVEL MOISTURE AND SHEAR. NORTH OF THE WARM FRONT, EVOLUTION INTO A QLCS WILL BE POSSIBLE, WITH A CORRESPONDING RISK OF DAMAGING WIND INTO PORTIONS OF THE TN VALLEY. MEANWHILE, FURTHER SOUTH, MODERATE TO LOCALLY STRONG INSTABILITY IS FORECAST TO DEVELOP ALONG/SOUTH OF THE WARM FRONTAL POSITION, WHICH WILL BE MODULATED BY THE IMPACT OF OUTFLOW FROM ANY EARLY CONVECTION DESCRIBED ABOVE. MIDLEVEL FLOW WILL INCREASE TO 70-100 KT AS A SOUTH-SOUTHWESTERLY LOW-LEVEL JET INTENSIFIES INTO THE 40-60 KT RANGE. THESE WIND PROFILES COMBINED WITH AMPLE INSTABILITY (MLCAPE OF 1500-3000 J/KG) WILL SUPPORT THE POTENTIAL FOR INTENSE SUPERCELLS. ANY SURFACE-BASED INITIATION ALONG AND EAST OF A PSEUDO-DRYLINE MOVING INTO WESTERN LA BY LATE AFTERNOON COULD EVOLVE INTO ONE OR MORE LONG-TRACKED SUPERCELLS CAPABLE OF PRODUCING STRONG TORNADOES, LARGE HAIL, AND DAMAGING WIND GUSTS. THE EXTENT OF DEVELOPMENT WITHIN THE WARM SECTOR REMAINS SOMEWHAT UNCERTAIN, GIVEN THE PRESENCE OF A CAPPING INVERSION AND GENERALLY SUBTLE FOCI FOR INITIATION. WHILE THE CONDITIONAL RISK OF ALL SEVERE HAZARDS WILL BE QUITE HIGH IF SUPERCELLS DEVELOP, UNCERTAINTY REMAINS REGARDING HOW CONVECTION WILL EVOLVE FROM THE MORNING INTO THE AFTERNOON. ANY REMNANT OUTFLOW RELATED TO EARLY CONVECTION WILL DETERMINE THE NORTHERN EXTENT OF THE HIGHER-END TORNADO POTENTIAL, AND SOME GUIDANCE SUGGESTS THE POTENTIAL FOR ELEVATED CONVECTION WITHIN A MIDLEVEL MOIST PLUME ACROSS THE WARM SECTOR DURING THE AFTERNOON, WHICH COULD EITHER DAMPEN THE SEVERE POTENTIAL, OR EVOLVE INTO SURFACE-BASED CONVECTION WITH A SUBSTANTIAL SEVERE THREAT. GIVEN THESE FACTORS, THERE IS TOO MUCH UNCERTAINTY TO UPGRADE THE ONGOING OUTLOOK AT THIS TIME. EVOLUTION INTO MORE OF QLCS IS SUGGESTED BY MOST GUIDANCE BY SUNDAY EVENING, WHICH WOULD POSE AN INCREASING THREAT OF WIDESPREAD DAMAGING WINDS AND A FEW TORNADOES ACROSS MUCH OF AL INTO WESTERN/CENTRAL GA THROUGH THE OVERNIGHT HOURS. HIGHER WIND PROBABILITIES MAY BE NEEDED IN SUBSEQUENT OUTLOOKS IF CONFIDENCE IN THIS SCENARIO GROWS. ..CENTRAL/SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE OZARK PLATEAU WHILE WIDESPREAD CONVECTION TO THE SOUTHEAST WILL LIKELY LIMIT TRANSPORT OF DEEPER GULF MOISTURE INTO THE PLAINS/OZARKS, MORE MODEST MOISTURE THAT WAS ADVECTED INTO THE REGION ON SATURDAY SHOULD REMAIN IN PLACE AHEAD THE ADVANCING SURFACE LOW AND COLD FRONT SUNDAY AFTERNOON. STEEP LAPSE RATES AND COLD MIDLEVEL TEMPERATURES ASSOCIATED WITH THE PRIMARY SHORTWAVE WILL SUPPORT MODERATE DESTABILIZATION. WIND PROFILES WILL LIKELY NOT FAVOR CLASSIC SUPERCELLS, WITH SOME BACKING OF MID/UPPER-LEVEL FLOW EXPECTED, BUT EFFECTIVE SHEAR WILL BE SUPPORTIVE OF ORGANIZED STRUCTURES. LARGE HAIL (POTENTIALLY SIGNIFICANT) WILL BE THE PRIMARY THREAT, WITH SOME WIND POTENTIAL IF ANY UPSCALE GROWTH OCCURS. WIND PROFILES WILL NOT GENERALLY FAVOR TORNADO POTENTIAL, THOUGH ROBUST UPDRAFTS INTERACTING WITH LOCALLY ENHANCED VORTICITY NEAR THE SURFACE CYCLONE COULD PRODUCE A TORNADO OR TWO. ..TN VALLEY INTO THE OH VALLEY -- SUNDAY NIGHT SUBSTANTIAL UNCERTAINTY REMAINS REGARDING THE POTENTIAL FOR DESTABILIZATION FROM NORTHERN PORTIONS OF THE TN VALLEY INTO THE OH VALLEY, DUE TO THE POTENTIAL FOR WIDESPREAD CONVECTION TO THE SOUTH OF THIS AREA. HOWEVER, RAPIDLY STRENGTHENING WIND FIELDS IN ADVANCE OF THE DEEPENING CYCLONE WILL SUPPORT THE POTENTIAL FOR DAMAGING WIND AND PERHAPS A TORNADO RISK BY SUNDAY EVENING SHOULD EVEN MODEST DESTABILIZATION OCCUR, AS STRONG CONVECTION ATTEMPTS TO MOVE IN FROM THE SOUTHWEST IN TANDEM WITH THE DEEPENING CYCLONE. .. EASTERN GEORGIA INTO THE CAROLINAS/MID ATLANTIC SUBSTANTIAL LOW-LEVEL MOISTENING IS EXPECTED OVER EASTERN GA INTO THE CAROLINAS/MID ATLANTIC THROUGH THE PERIOD. THERE IS A NONZERO RISK OF ORGANIZED CONVECTION ALONG/NORTH OF THE WARM FRONT DURING THE DAY INTO THE EVENING, WHICH WOULD POSE SOME RISK OF LOCALLY DAMAGING WIND OR PERHAPS A TORNADO, BUT CONFIDENCE IN THIS SCENARIO IS LOW AT THIS TIME. A MORE LIKELY SCENARIO IS FOR WIDESPREAD UPSTREAM CONVECTION TO EVOLVE INTO MULTIPLE CLUSTERS OR A QLCS AND MOVE INTO THIS REGION SOMETIME EARLY MONDAY MORNING. INTENSE WIND PROFILES WILL SUPPORT A RISK OF WIDESPREAD DAMAGING WIND AND A FEW TORNADOES, GIVEN SUFFICIENT INSTABILITY. THE MAGNITUDE AND COVERAGE OF THE SEVERE THREAT IN THIS REGION WILL BE DETERMINED IN PART BY HOW FAST ORGANIZED CONVECTION APPROACHES FROM THE WEST. IF CONVECTION ACCELERATES AND ARRIVES FASTER THAT CURRENT GUIDANCE WOULD INDICATE, THEN THERE IS LESS TIME FOR LOW-LEVEL MOISTENING AND DESTABILIZATION, AND THE MAGNITUDE AND NORTHWARD-EXTENT OF THE THREAT MAY BE LIMITED. IF CONVECTION DOES NOT ARRIVE UNTIL VERY LATE IN THE PERIOD, THEN A MORE SUBSTANTIAL SEVERE THREAT COULD EVOLVE. IF SOME OF THE SLOWER GUIDANCE TURNS OUT TO BE ACCURATE, THEN THE PRIMARY SEVERE THREAT IN THIS REGION MAY NOT COME UNTIL THE D3/MONDAY PERIOD. PROBABILITIES MAY NEED TO BE INCREASED IN THIS AREA ONCE THE DETAILS COME INTO BETTER FOCUS. ..DEAN/BROYLES.. 04/11/2020 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sydney Claridge Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 It looks as if there is some convective initiation starting immediately north of Abilene, TX. Some additional areas of potential initiation also seem apparent on radar SE of there and over the Hill Country. I will be closely watching to see how widespread any convection can become. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sydney Claridge Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 This leading convective activity from west of Waco to northeast of Abilene may put a wrench into any possible model solutions for today. Even the NAM3k backed off on showing widespread morning convection. But it is all moving northeasterly, and the warm, moist airmass lies to the west of these initial elevated storms. Unless more widespread convection develops in the wake of these storms, I would not be surprised to see surface instability move in after the passage of these storms. If surface temperatures and dewpoints were higher, I would be much more concerned with severe storm activity, especially considering that I am seeing sunshine here in west Fort Worth. That said, the storm north of Albany, TX could also be on the verge of turning severe for large hail. EDIT: it just went severe for up to half-dollar sized hail and 60 mph wind gusts. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sydney Claridge Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 The field of agitated cumulus south of Lubbock could evolve into one of the severe storm threats later today, as it moves east. This is where the CAMs suggested convective activity would initiate later, but said models did not predict the activity currently over north Texas (earlier NAM3k runs did, but more widespread than current observations). Outside of the larger storms near Graham and the complex NW of Waco, the current convective activity over north Texas seems to be doing very little to suppress insolation in the surrounding area (there is still plenty of sunshine at my location in west Fort Worth for instance), although satellite imagery does show cloudier conditions behind this activity. The back edge of this activity also looks to be a straight line from Waco to Graham, with almost nothing behind that. Unless we get additional convective activity immediately behind this, I think north-central Texas ends up seeing a good amount of surface-based instability this afternoon. What to watch for is if this initial convective activity lays down any outflow boundaries that Round 2 could exploit. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
janetjanet998 Posted April 11, 2020 Author Share Posted April 11, 2020 new day 1 10% TOR over NW texas and 10% hatched over SAT and areas SW DAY 1 CONVECTIVE OUTLOOK NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK 1124 AM CDT SAT APR 11 2020 VALID 111630Z - 121200Z ..THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PARTS OF TX ..SUMMARY SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ARE EXPECTED ACROSS PARTS OF THE SOUTHERN GREAT PLAINS, WITH THE GREATEST THREAT DURING THE LATE AFTERNOON THROUGH EARLY MORNING. VERY LARGE HAIL, TORNADOES, AND SCATTERED DAMAGING WINDS WILL BE THE PRIMARY HAZARDS. ..SYNOPSIS A CLOSED MID-LEVEL LOW ALONG THE AZ/SONORA BORDER WILL EVOLVE INTO AN OPEN WAVE AS IT REACHES THE TX TRANS-PECOS AND NORTHEAST CHIHUAHUA BY EARLY MORNING, IN RESPONSE TO AN UPSTREAM TROUGH DIGGING SOUTHEAST INTO THE NORTHERN ROCKIES. AT THE SURFACE, A LEE CYCLONE IS EXPECTED TO CONSOLIDATE NEAR THE KS/CO BORDER THIS AFTERNOON/EVENING. THE LEE CYCLONE WILL INDUCE STRENGTHENING SOUTHERLY LOW-LEVEL FLOW AND NORTHWARD MOISTURE TRANSPORT ACROSS THE SOUTHERN GREAT PLAINS, AS THE REMNANT FRONT NEAR THE TX COAST ADVANCES NORTH THROUGH TONIGHT. ..NORTH TX/SOUTHERN OK TO THE ARK-LA-MISS ELEVATED CONVECTION IS ONGOING ACROSS PARTS OF NORTH-CENTRAL TX, IN A ZONE OF LOW-LEVEL WARM ADVECTION WITH INCREASING LOW-LEVEL MOISTURE FROM THE WEST AND SOUTHWEST. THIS ACTIVITY WILL HAVE THE POTENTIAL TO PRODUCE ISOLATED SEVERE HAIL ALONG THE EASTERN EDGE OF THE EXPANDING BUOYANCY PLUME, AS IT CONTINUES EAST THROUGH THE REST OF THE PERIOD, EVENTUALLY REACHING THE ARK-LA-MISS REGION. FARTHER WEST, POCKETS OF GREATER BOUNDARY-LAYER HEATING WITHIN THE PLUME OF UPPER 50S TO MID 60S SURFACE DEW POINTS WILL SUPPORT A BROAD SWATH OF MODERATE BUOYANCY WITH MLCAPE REACHING 1500-2500 J/KG. AT LEAST A FEW SUPERCELLS ARE EXPECTED TO DEVELOP ACROSS NORTHWEST TX AND SPREAD INTO SOUTHWEST OK AND WESTERN NORTH TX THIS EVENING. THE GREATEST COVERAGE OF SEVERE SHOULD BE FROM LARGE HAIL, BUT A COUPLE TORNADIC SUPERCELLS AND ISOLATED SEVERE WIND GUSTS WILL BE POSSIBLE AS WELL. ..SOUTHERN EDWARDS PLATEAU TO CENTRAL/EAST-CENTRAL TX SEVERE STORM DEVELOPMENT IS EXPECTED ACROSS THE SOUTHERN EDWARDS PLATEAU BETWEEN 03-06Z AS INCREASING HEIGHT FALLS/FORCING FOR ASCENT ENCOUNTER THE STRONG BUOYANCY ALONG THE WEST EDGE OF RATHER RICH LOW-LEVEL MOISTURE. A COUPLE INTENSE SUPERCELLS ARE EXPECTED ROUGHLY FROM THE DEL RIO TO SAN ANTONIO VICINITY WHERE ALL SIGNIFICANT SEVERE HAZARDS ARE POSSIBLE. UPSCALE GROWTH INTO A BROADER CLUSTER IS LIKELY INTO EAST-CENTRAL TX THROUGH EARLY MORNING. VERY LARGE HAIL, A FEW TORNADOES, AND A SWATH OF DAMAGING WINDS WILL ALL BE POSSIBLE FROM LATE EVENING THROUGH DAYBREAK. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
janetjanet998 Posted April 11, 2020 Author Share Posted April 11, 2020 HRRR has discrete cells over red river area and a little south 20z-04z then when that gets tamed the development SW of SAT 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sydney Claridge Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 You don’t see hatching on a 15% wind risk that often, as SPC has out now up to and SW of San Antonio; most times hatched wind is not seen unless there is a 30%+ wind risk. Looks like the more intense storms could initiate around the Serranias del Burro of northern Mexico. I also got a quick-hitting convective shower at my location. The question is how much of a cold pool these storms over N TX are leaving behind. There is a prominent cold pool (lower 60s temperatures) just south of the Metroplex, and a lesser cold pool just to the NW of the Metroplex, but most DFW-area temperatures (except for Denton and Waxahachie) are in the mid-60s. The urban heat island could account for this, but the more intense storm cores went south and NW of the center of the Metroplex. SPC did trim the ENH risk further SW from N TX, however. Convective initiation is also underway SE of Lubbock at this time. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
janetjanet998 Posted April 11, 2020 Author Share Posted April 11, 2020 new day 2 SPC now talking about the potential crapvection in the warm sector DAY 2 CONVECTIVE OUTLOOK NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK 1235 PM CDT SAT APR 11 2020 VALID 121200Z - 131200Z ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM NORTHERN LOUISIANA THROUGH SOUTHEAST ARKANSAS...MISSISSIPPI INTO CENTRAL AND NORTHERN ALABAMA... ..SUMMARY AN OUTBREAK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS APPEARS LIKELY SUNDAY INTO SUNDAY NIGHT, WITH THE GREATEST THREAT EXPECTED FROM LOUISIANA THROUGH MUCH OF THE SOUTHEAST AND TENNESSEE VALLEY. STRONG TORNADOES, POTENTIALLY WIDESPREAD DAMAGING WINDS, AND LARGE HAIL ARE ALL POSSIBLE. ..SYNOPSIS THE EJECTING SHORTWAVE TROUGH INITIALLY OVER THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS ON SUNDAY MORNING IS FORECAST TO MOVE QUICKLY EASTWARD TO THE LOWER MS VALLEY BY EARLY EVENING, AND THEN ACCELERATE NORTHEASTWARD TOWARD THE OHIO VALLEY LATE SUNDAY NIGHT INTO MONDAY MORNING, AS IT BECOMES ABSORBED WITHIN AN AMPLIFYING LONGWAVE TROUGH THAT WILL ENCOMPASS NEARLY ALL THE CONUS BY 12Z MONDAY. IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE EJECTING TROUGH, A BROAD SURFACE LOW CENTERED OVER THE CENTRAL/SOUTHERN PLAINS ON SUNDAY MORNING WILL MOVE EASTWARD TO THE MID-MS VALLEY BY 00Z MONDAY, AND THEN MOVE NORTHEASTWARD AND RAPIDLY INTENSIFY INTO AN INTENSE CYCLONE OVER THE LOWER GREAT LAKES BY 12Z MONDAY. A WARM FRONT WILL SURGE NORTHWARD AHEAD OF THE LOW ACROSS THE LOWER MS VALLEY AND SOUTHEAST, WHILE A STRONG COLD FRONT WILL MOVE SOUTHWARD THROUGH MUCH OF THE PLAINS IN THE WAKE OF THE DEPARTING CYCLONE. ...EAST TX NORTHEASTWARD THROUGH MUCH OF THE SOUTHEAST AND TN VALLEY... ONE OR MORE CLUSTERS OF DEEP CONVECTION WILL LIKELY BE ONGOING AT 12Z SUNDAY MORNING SOMEWHERE OVER EAST TX AND POTENTIALLY INTO PORTIONS OF THE LOWER MS VALLEY. THE INTENSITY AND AREAL EXTENT OF ANY SUCH CLUSTERS REMAIN UNCERTAIN, BUT AMPLE SHEAR AND INSTABILITY WILL FAVOR A THREAT OF HAIL AND DAMAGING WIND WITH ANY ORGANIZED CONVECTION AT THE START OF THE PERIOD. SOME TORNADO THREAT WILL ALSO BE PRESENT SUNDAY MORNING WITH ANY SEMI-DISCRETE STORMS THAT BEGIN TO INTERACT WITH THE RICHER LOW-LEVEL MOISTURE IN THE VICINITY OF THE WARM FRONT. AS THIS CONVECTION SPREADS NORTHEASTWARD, INTENSIFICATION IS POSSIBLE INTO PORTIONS OF THE ARKLAMISS REGION, WITH AN INCREASING TORNADO THREAT IN LATE MORNING/EARLY AFTERNOON WITH ANY SURFACE-BASED STORMS, GIVEN RAPIDLY INCREASING LOW-LEVEL MOISTURE AND SHEAR. NORTH OF THE WARM FRONT, EVOLUTION INTO A QLCS WILL BE POSSIBLE, WITH A RISK OF DAMAGING WIND INTO PORTIONS OF THE TN VALLEY. FARTHER SOUTH, MODERATE TO LOCALLY STRONG INSTABILITY IS FORECAST TO DEVELOP ALONG/SOUTH OF THE WARM FRONTAL POSITION, WHICH WILL BE MODULATED BY THE IMPACT OF OUTFLOW FROM ANY EARLY CONVECTION DESCRIBED ABOVE. MIDLEVEL FLOW WILL INCREASE TO 70-100 KT AS A SOUTH-SOUTHWESTERLY LOW-LEVEL JET INTENSIFIES INTO THE 40-60 KT RANGE. THESE WIND PROFILES COMBINED WITH AMPLE INSTABILITY (MLCAPE OF 1500-3000 J/KG) WILL SUPPORT THE POTENTIAL FOR INTENSE SUPERCELLS. ANY SURFACE-BASED INITIATION ALONG AND EAST OF A PSEUDO-DRYLINE MOVING INTO WESTERN LA BY LATE AFTERNOON COULD EVOLVE INTO ONE OR MORE LONG-TRACKED SUPERCELLS CAPABLE OF PRODUCING STRONG TORNADOES, LARGE HAIL, AND DAMAGING WIND GUSTS. THE EXTENT OF DEVELOPMENT WITHIN THE WARM SECTOR REMAINS SOMEWHAT UNCERTAIN, GIVEN THE PRESENCE OF A CAPPING INVERSION AND GENERALLY SUBTLE FOCI FOR INITIATION. WHILE THE CONDITIONAL RISK OF ALL SEVERE HAZARDS WILL BE QUITE HIGH IF SUPERCELLS DEVELOP, UNCERTAINTY REMAINS REGARDING HOW CONVECTION WILL EVOLVE FROM THE MORNING INTO THE AFTERNOON. ANY REMNANT OUTFLOW RELATED TO EARLY CONVECTION WILL DETERMINE THE NORTHERN EXTENT OF THE HIGHER-END TORNADO POTENTIAL, AND SOME GUIDANCE SUGGESTS THE POTENTIAL FOR ELEVATED CONVECTION WITHIN A MIDLEVEL MOIST PLUME ACROSS THE WARM SECTOR DURING THE AFTERNOON, WHICH COULD EITHER DAMPEN THE SEVERE POTENTIAL, OR EVOLVE INTO SURFACE-BASED CONVECTION WITH A SUBSTANTIAL SEVERE THREAT. GIVEN THESE FACTORS, THERE IS TOO MUCH UNCERTAINTY TO UPGRADE THE ONGOING OUTLOOK AT THIS TIME. EVOLUTION INTO MORE OF QLCS IS SUGGESTED BY MOST GUIDANCE BY SUNDAY EVENING, WHICH WOULD POSE AN INCREASING THREAT OF WIDESPREAD DAMAGING WINDS AND A FEW TORNADOES ACROSS MUCH OF AL INTO WESTERN/CENTRAL GA THROUGH THE OVERNIGHT HOURS. HIGHER WIND PROBABILITIES MAY BE NEEDED IN SUBSEQUENT OUTLOOKS IF CONFIDENCE IN THIS SCENARIO GROWS. ..TN VALLEY INTO THE OH VALLEY -- SUNDAY NIGHT SUBSTANTIAL UNCERTAINTY REMAINS REGARDING THE POTENTIAL FOR DESTABILIZATION FROM NORTHERN PORTIONS OF THE TN VALLEY INTO THE OH VALLEY, DUE TO THE POTENTIAL FOR WIDESPREAD CONVECTION TO THE SOUTH OF THIS AREA. HOWEVER, RAPIDLY STRENGTHENING WIND FIELDS IN ADVANCE OF THE DEEPENING CYCLONE WILL SUPPORT THE POTENTIAL FOR DAMAGING WIND AND PERHAPS A TORNADO RISK BY SUNDAY EVENING SHOULD EVEN MODEST DESTABILIZATION OCCUR, AS STRONG CONVECTION ATTEMPTS TO MOVE IN FROM THE SOUTHWEST IN TANDEM WITH THE DEEPENING CYCLONE. ... EASTERN GEORGIA INTO THE CAROLINAS/MID ATLANTIC... SUBSTANTIAL LOW-LEVEL MOISTENING IS EXPECTED OVER EASTERN GA INTO THE CAROLINAS/MID ATLANTIC THROUGH THE PERIOD. THERE IS A NONZERO RISK OF ORGANIZED CONVECTION ALONG/NORTH OF THE WARM FRONT DURING THE DAY INTO THE EVENING, WHICH WOULD POSE SOME RISK OF LOCALLY DAMAGING WIND OR PERHAPS A TORNADO, BUT CONFIDENCE IN THIS SCENARIO IS LOW AT THIS TIME. A MORE LIKELY SCENARIO IS FOR WIDESPREAD UPSTREAM CONVECTION TO EVOLVE INTO MULTIPLE CLUSTERS OR A QLCS AND MOVE INTO THIS REGION SOMETIME EARLY MONDAY MORNING. INTENSE WIND PROFILES WILL SUPPORT A RISK OF DAMAGING WIND AND A FEW TORNADOES, GIVEN SUFFICIENT INSTABILITY. THE MAGNITUDE AND COVERAGE OF THE SEVERE THREAT IN THIS REGION WILL BE DETERMINED IN PART BY HOW FAST ORGANIZED CONVECTION APPROACHES FROM THE WEST. IF CONVECTION ACCELERATES AND ARRIVES FASTER THAT CURRENT GUIDANCE WOULD INDICATE, THEN THERE IS LESS TIME FOR LOW-LEVEL MOISTENING AND DESTABILIZATION, AND THE MAGNITUDE AND NORTHWARD-EXTENT OF THE THREAT MAY BE LIMITED. IF CONVECTION DOES NOT ARRIVE UNTIL VERY LATE IN THE PERIOD, THEN A MORE SUBSTANTIAL SEVERE THREAT COULD EVOLVE. IF SOME OF THE SLOWER GUIDANCE TURNS OUT TO BE ACCURATE, THEN THE PRIMARY SEVERE THREAT IN THIS REGION MAY NOT COME UNTIL THE D3/MONDAY PERIOD. PROBABILITIES MAY NEED TO BE INCREASED IN THIS AREA ONCE THE DETAILS COME INTO BETTER FOCUS. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
janetjanet998 Posted April 11, 2020 Author Share Posted April 11, 2020 WEST TX MESO MESOSCALE DISCUSSION 0334 NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK 1247 PM CDT SAT APR 11 2020 AREAS AFFECTED...PERMIAN BASIN/TX SOUTH PLAINS INTO FAR NORTHWEST TX CONCERNING...SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH LIKELY VALID 111747Z - 111945Z PROBABILITY OF WATCH ISSUANCE...80 PERCENT SUMMARY...INCREASING THUNDERSTORM COVERAGE IS ANTICIPATED OVER THE NEXT FEW HOURS. OVERALL ENVIRONMENT SUPPORTS SUPERCELLS CAPABLE OF ALL SEVERE HAZARDS AND A WATCH WILL LIKELY BE NEEDED. DISCUSSION...GOES-16 MESOSECTOR IMAGERY HAS SHOWN NUMEROUS ATTEMPTS AT DEEP CONVECTION ACROSS THE PERMIAN BASIN AND TX SOUTH PLAINS OVER THE PAST HOUR. A FEW OF THESE ATTEMPTS NOW APPEAR SUCCESSFUL, LIKELY AIDED BY PERSISTENT LOW-LEVEL MOISTURE CONVERGENCE AUGMENTED BY INCREASING LARGE-SCALE ASCENT. THIS LOW-LEVEL MOISTURE CONVERGENCE AND STRENGTHENING LARGE-SCALE ASCENT IS EXPECTED TO CONTINUE FOR THE NEXT SEVERAL HOURS, LEADING TO MORE CONVECTIVE INITIATION AND INCREASED THUNDERSTORM COVERAGE. AIR MASS CONTINUES TO DESTABILIZE AS LOW-LEVEL MOISTURE ADVECTS NORTHWARD AND DIURNAL HEATING INTENSIFIES. RECENT SURFACE ANALYSIS PLACED 60 DEG F DEWPOINTS FROM SPS IN FAR NORTHWEST TX TO ABOUT 25 MILES NORTHWEST OF MAF IN THE PERMIAN BASIN. MESOANALYSIS ESTIMATES MLCAPE IS ALREADY AROUND 1500 TO 2000 J/KG, WITH INCREASE TO AROUND 2500 J/KG LIKELY OVER THE NEXT FEW HOURS. VERTICAL SHEAR IS INCREASING AS WELL, CREATING AN ENVIRONMENT SUPPORTIVE OF SUPERCELL THUNDERSTORMS. PRIMARY THREAT WILL BE LARGE TO VERY-LARGE HAIL. STORMS WILL LIKELY BE SLIGHTLY ELEVATED INITIALLY, BUT COULD BECOME SURFACE-BASED WITH TIME AS LOW-LEVEL STABILITY ERODES FARTHER EAST. ANY SURFACE-BASED STORMS WOULD ALSO POSE A THREAT FOR DAMAGING WIND GUSTS AND TORNADOES. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sydney Claridge Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 I'm awaiting the results of the 18z HRRR run, but the 17z run puts a big storm through the DFW area between 9-10pm (16z run also shows a big storm, and 15z shows lesser storms). That said, HRRR is showing warmer temperatures than what we are actually observing at the present moment though (currently 66F in Fort Worth, but 17z HRRR projected 70 to 71F by now). Once this cold pool shifts northeast, the Metroplex may try to destabilize (though the cloud cover seems to be hampering things a little bit), and the boundary left behind is always a concern if a storm comes into proximity with it. EDIT: 18z run did back off on placing storms in the DFW area. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chinook Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 Can I just complain for 4 seconds here? Why is it that the NAM, which is our best model for about 24-48 hrs for severe weather, can't forecast CAPE for crap? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
janetjanet998 Posted April 11, 2020 Author Share Posted April 11, 2020 URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED TORNADO WATCH NUMBER 100 NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK 200 PM CDT SAT APR 11 2020 THE NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER HAS ISSUED A * TORNADO WATCH FOR PORTIONS OF SOUTHWEST OKLAHOMA WESTERN AND NORTHWEST TEXAS * EFFECTIVE THIS SATURDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING FROM 200 PM UNTIL 1000 PM CDT. * PRIMARY THREATS INCLUDE... A FEW TORNADOES LIKELY SCATTERED LARGE HAIL AND ISOLATED VERY LARGE HAIL EVENTS TO 3 INCHES IN DIAMETER LIKELY SCATTERED DAMAGING WIND GUSTS TO 70 MPH POSSIBLE Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Indystorm Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 And so this Easter outbreak episode possibly begins with the first of many watches starting in nw and west TX and sw OK which will probably continue through tonight, Easter Day and night, and possibly Monday as well in the Carolinas. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
brianc33710 Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 This is my take, for what its worth. Right now the dewpoint in Bham is 34. The highest dp in central AL is just 41. Yes, I know that the warm front comes thru tonight, but the of-needed 80 deg his, not just the 70 dps, are S of a line from Demopolis to Auburn. And the best dynamics are N of that line. Right now, I'm skeptical, and will go with a squall line like type of event. Feel free to disagree though. Also, Broyles, who took the bold move of inserting the 45% contour inside the already HIGH risk 9 yrs ago, seems less than convinced for Sunday. Things can change though, and that would prove me wrong. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
janetjanet998 Posted April 11, 2020 Author Share Posted April 11, 2020 The convection the models develop over TX tonight reminds me of the convection that developed over OK overnight two weeks ago that messed up the MOD risk for IL it will be moving into MS/AL near or just before peak heating like it did over IL two weeks ago while the atmosphere tries to recover behind it every outbreak is different though....time will tell Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
brianc33710 Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 16 minutes ago, janetjanet998 said: The convection the models develop over TX tonight reminds me of the convection that developed over OK overnight two weeks ago that messed up the MOD risk for IL it will be moving into MS/AL near or just before peak heating like it did over IL two weeks ago while the atmosphere tries to recover behind it every outbreak is different though....time will tell Yeah. In discussions 6-12 hrs before that outbreak, the SPC mentioned pulling the High Risk trigger. By the time the outbreak began, the SPC said that they would stick w/ the MOD risk. The SE is closer to the Gulf though, so that warmth and moisture is closer to us than in IL. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Amped Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 13 minutes ago, janetjanet998 said: The convection the models develop over TX tonight reminds me of the convection that developed over OK overnight two weeks ago that messed up the MOD risk for IL it will be moving into MS/AL near or just before peak heating like it did over IL two weeks ago while the atmosphere tries to recover behind it every outbreak is different though....time will tell LLJ is way stronger in this outbreak. It will quickly shove any morning crapvection to the north of the outbreak area. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
janetjanet998 Posted April 11, 2020 Author Share Posted April 11, 2020 46 minutes ago, janetjanet998 said: The convection the models develop over TX tonight reminds me of the convection that developed over OK overnight two weeks ago that messed up the MOD risk for IL it will be moving into MS/AL near or just before peak heating like it did over IL two weeks ago while the atmosphere tries to recover behind it every outbreak is different though....time will tell 18Z Nam nest are now leaning towards this....the convection over TX moves over MS/AL and more crapvection develops just behind it the results is no deep surface based convection over MS/AL until after 03z and the storms are in a semi-line AR perhaps looks interesting late afternoon another scenario is that the TX storms and crapvection are more severe then models and there are two waves one mid-day and one late evening/overnight Nowcast of course will be key Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MUWX Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 The storm north of Abilene certainly has the look Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sydney Claridge Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 20 minutes ago, MUWX said: The storm north of Abilene certainly has the look Agreed. Definitely some rotation trying to form on it. The question is how long these storms can remain intense with eastward extent, given the cooler temperatures further east. You have mid-70s temperatures at Haskell, but two counties east at Graham, the temperature is in the upper-60s. That said, areas to the east are warming and moistening as the cold pool from the earlier convection tries to erode. Seems like that cold pool is persistently stubborn, especially just south of DFW, where Waxahachie continues to report 63F, but just south of there temperatures seem a lot warmer; Hillsboro is in the lower-70s. And there is another severe-warned storm north of Ardmore, OK as well. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Indystorm Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 BULLETIN - EAS ACTIVATION REQUESTED TORNADO WARNING NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SAN ANGELO TX 407 PM CDT SAT APR 11 2020 THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN SAN ANGELO HAS ISSUED A * TORNADO WARNING FOR... CENTRAL HASKELL COUNTY IN WEST CENTRAL TEXAS... * UNTIL 445 PM CDT. * AT 406 PM CDT, A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM CAPABLE OF PRODUCING A TORNADO WAS LOCATED OVER RULE, OR NEAR HASKELL, MOVING EAST AT 30 MPH. HAZARD...TORNADO AND HAIL UP TO TWO INCHES IN DIAMETER. SOURCE...RADAR INDICATED ROTATION. IMPACT...FLYING DEBRIS WILL BE DANGEROUS TO THOSE CAUGHT WITHOUT SHELTER. MOBILE HOMES WILL BE DAMAGED OR DESTROYED. DAMAGE TO ROOFS, WINDOWS, AND VEHICLES WILL OCCUR. TREE DAMAGE IS LIKELY. * THIS DANGEROUS STORM WILL BE NEAR... HASKELL AROUND 420 PM CDT. IRBY AROUND 445 PM CDT. First tor warning of this episode. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sydney Claridge Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 Also watch that storm SW of the tornado-warned storm near Haskell. That severe-warned storm E of Roby looks like it is trying to form a hook as well. Rotation does not look as good at this time, though. EDIT: well it looked like it was developing a hook. Seems less obvious now. EDIT 2: the hook is back. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
1900hurricane Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 I'm starting to get a little more interested in the Del Rio to College Station corridor in the overnight period. As is typical with an overnight threat, low level lapse rates are not great and there is some capping involved. However, I do wonder if the combination of a lead shortwave and the ejection of the main trough might erode capping enough to get true surface based convection. I'm not usually too keen on overnight storms rooting to the surface in this region because of nocturnal decoupling in the boundary layer, but this may one of those times it has a better shot at happening. In any case, the SPC does have a 10% hatched risk from Del Rio to Austin for the overnight and mentions all modes of severe weather are possible. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sydney Claridge Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 There's definitely a push of warmer, more humid air towards the DFW Metroplex now. Cleburne is now reporting 70 with a dewpoint of 66, and Waxahachie has now warmed to near 70 (they were in the cold pool earlier). Those severe storm parameters (EHI, SigTor, Supercell composite, etc.) are starting to creep northwards. If this airmass pushes any further north (and it will), provided we get storms tonight, that might be cause for concern, especially if a boundary is in the vicinity. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bob's Burgers Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 Conditions are getting much better near Dyess Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sydney Claridge Posted April 11, 2020 Share Posted April 11, 2020 What's crazy is that area near Albany was hit with tornadoes just a few weeks ago. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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