PowellVolz Posted Tuesday at 05:07 PM Share Posted Tuesday at 05:07 PM 3 minutes ago, nrgjeff said: If the 12Z Tuesday forecast holds. Saturday is going to be a day. CSU model is probably keying in on outflow in Bama. Plus that surface low. Mass response (LLJ other levels) has trended up on Saturday due to the more obvious 2nd wave at the upper levels. Also the reason for the surface low. It's all connected. kinda of a catch 22. The potential lack of moisture for Friday that the mods are now showing could mean less convection Friday/Friday night which could potentially allow for more moisture return on Saturday. However the mods are also showing a little less zonal flow and more 500mb winds running parallel to the CF. More zonal flow, more discrete cells. More parallel winds, more of a QLCS or squall line. Something to watch. 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Matthew70 Posted Tuesday at 06:19 PM Share Posted Tuesday at 06:19 PM I could see the SPC expanding the 30% at this time. I am afraid moisture return is going to be much more expansive. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
*Flash* Posted yesterday at 12:12 AM Share Posted yesterday at 12:12 AM 7 hours ago, PowellVolz said: kinda of a catch 22. The potential lack of moisture for Friday that the mods are now showing could mean less convection Friday/Friday night which could potentially allow for more moisture return on Saturday. However the mods are also showing a little less zonal flow and more 500mb winds running parallel to the CF. More zonal flow, more discrete cells. More parallel winds, more of a QLCS or squall line. Something to watch. Wouldn't surprise me if middle TN comes out of this relatively unscathed, granted for west/southern middle/southeast TN...different story. Too many times in this scenario, I've seen some sort of stabilizing intrusion cap the severe criteria potential. Looking at the 18z guidance, the bulk of the greatest energy will be well south of BNA. Plenty of time for adjustments but frankly, I'm not worried or amped up about the threat. That said, I'm looking forward to a chase down 65. Could be a red letter day for our friends in MS/AL/GA. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Matthew70 Posted yesterday at 12:41 AM Share Posted yesterday at 12:41 AM 26 minutes ago, *Flash* said: Wouldn't surprise me if middle TN comes out of this relatively unscathed, granted for west/southern middle/southeast TN...different story. Too many times in this scenario, I've seen some sort of stabilizing intrusion cap the severe criteria potential. Looking at the 18z guidance, the bulk of the greatest energy will be well south of BNA. Plenty of time for adjustments but frankly, I'm not worried or amped up about the threat. That said, I'm looking forward to a chase down 65. Could be a red letter day for our friends in MS/AL/GA. Agree. I believe the mid state is going to see a lot of rain & thunderstorms but nothing more than that. Seems Nashville has its every few years long track tornado. Other than that no red letter day. The storm shield is stout. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Runman292 Posted yesterday at 09:20 AM Share Posted yesterday at 09:20 AM Day 4 Outlook from the SPC: ...SEVERE WEATHER OUTBREAK POSSIBLE ON D4/SAT... ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Sat - Central Gulf Coast States to the Ohio Valley... A strong large-scale upper trough is forecast to quickly move across the Plains to the MS Valley on Saturday. An intense jet streak will move across the Deep South into the OH Valley as this occurs. At the surface, a low secondary to the 980 mb low over the Upper Midwest is forecast to develop during the late morning/early afternoon across the mid-South. This will aid in further northward transport of rich Gulf moisture into portions of the Lower MS Valley and TN Valleys. Atop this moisture-primed boundary layer, cold 500 mb temperatures are forecast. This may support fairly steep lapse rates, which would foster moderate instability across portions of MS/AL amid supercell wind profiles. However, some uncertainty remains tied to the evolution of convection in the Day 3/Fri period into the morning hours of Saturday. Some forecast guidance suggests a relatively pristine warm sector will be maintained, or if only isolated convection develops overnight/early Saturday, recovery could occur. If this scenario unfolds, a concerning severe weather setup supporting all-hazard severe could unfold across portions of LA/MS/AL through the day and into evening, and eventually spreading east into GA overnight. Trends will be monitored closely over the coming days and further adjustments to the 30 percent/Enhanced risk area may be needed in future outlooks. With northward extent, instability will become more limited. Nevertheless, sufficient moisture amid intense deep-layer flow will support swaths of strong/damaging winds into the Ohio Valley and portions of the central Appalachians Saturday and Saturday night. Higher outlook probabilities may be needed in subsequent outlooks if confidence increases. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nrgjeff Posted 20 hours ago Share Posted 20 hours ago A look at the 84 hr. NAM - not yet reliable for surface beyond 60 hr. - shows an upper level regime somewhere between that of the GFS and that of the Euro. Note the globals are 06Z. GFS has robust instability, and still enough turning with height. Euro is not quite as unstable, but the turning with height is greater. 850 is about 10-20 deg. backed from straight south. Others are not. So two paths are offered to high overall parameters. All have a distinct Saturday short-wave. Surface is still TBD. Friday night into Saturday morning convection evolution is TBD. Without those pieces I don't consider siggy severe locked in. It's on the table though. 3 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Runman292 Posted 15 hours ago Share Posted 15 hours ago 4 hours ago, nrgjeff said: A look at the 84 hr. NAM - not yet reliable for surface beyond 60 hr. - shows an upper level regime somewhere between that of the GFS and that of the Euro. Note the globals are 06Z. GFS has robust instability, and still enough turning with height. Euro is not quite as unstable, but the turning with height is greater. 850 is about 10-20 deg. backed from straight south. Others are not. So two paths are offered to high overall parameters. All have a distinct Saturday short-wave. Surface is still TBD. Friday night into Saturday morning convection evolution is TBD. Without those pieces I don't consider siggy severe locked in. It's on the table though. I know it's way too far to determine this with any sense of absolute certainty, but if the instability is sufficient, could we see something similar to April 27th? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andyhb Posted 15 hours ago Share Posted 15 hours ago Saturday could be a bad day. The overlap of cold mid level temperatures, upper 60s dewpoints, and a 55-70+ kt LLJ cannot be underestimated. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Matthew70 Posted 15 hours ago Share Posted 15 hours ago 9 minutes ago, andyhb said: Saturday could be a bad day. The overlap of cold mid level temperatures, upper 60s dewpoints, and a 55-70+ kt LLJ cannot be underestimated. Do you think this is a west TN threat Friday night & an East TN threat Saturday afternoon? Skipping over middle? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Matthew70 Posted 15 hours ago Share Posted 15 hours ago 24 minutes ago, Runman292 said: I know it's way too far to determine this with any sense of absolute certainty, but if the instability is sufficient, could we see something similar to April 27th? As Spann says. “Nothing can compare to April 2011”. That’s a once every 30-40 years outbreak. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andyhb Posted 14 hours ago Share Posted 14 hours ago 33 minutes ago, Matthew70 said: Do you think this is a west TN threat Friday night & an East TN threat Saturday afternoon? Skipping over middle? That's impossible to really say this far out, but yes I'd lean towards Middle TN being too far east on Friday and too far north on Saturday. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
vortexse93 Posted 12 hours ago Share Posted 12 hours ago I am currently keeping my eyes out for Friday into Saturday. By glancing at the models over the last few days, I am personally not liking the timing nor the placement of this setup. This round I may end up sitting this one out. For me personally, it will be a stretch to make near Northeast AR/MO on Friday. For Saturday, the threat will be to my east and chasing east of I-55 is nearly impossible. While there are some spots that are decent to chase in, I am not much on fighting trees and hills. Plus, have some concerns in how Saturday morning may play out with the morning storms ahead of the main show. Have seen time after time when morning storms tend to ruin events. Not saying that will happen, it is something to keep in the back of the mind when making these decisions. Will continue to watch and see what the higher res models are showing by this time tomorrow. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andyhb Posted 4 hours ago Share Posted 4 hours ago D3 moderate risk out from SPC. Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0229 AM CDT Thu Mar 13 2025 Valid 151200Z - 161200Z ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF SOUTHEAST LOUISIANA INTO SOUTHERN AND CENTRAL MS/AL... ...SUMMARY... A severe weather outbreak is expected on Saturday from the central Gulf coast states/Deep South into the Ohio Valley. Significant tornadoes (focused across the South), swaths of damaging gusts, and hail are expected. ...Synopsis... An upper cyclone over the Upper Midwest will lift northeast into Ontario through Saturday evening. Meanwhile, a large-scale upper trough over the Plains will eject east toward the MS Valley. Strong southwesterly mid/upper flow (with a 500 mb jet streak near 100 kt) will overspread the Lower MS Valley/Mid-South vicinity by 00z, and continue east/northeast overnight into the Ohio Valley and central Appalachians. An intense south/southwesterly low level jet greater than 60 kt is forecast to overspread the central Gulf coast/Deep South into the TN/OH Valley during the late afternoon and nighttime hours. Rich Gulf moisture with dewpoints in the mid/upper 60s is expected to be focused over LA/MS/AL and the FL Panhandle, and possibly as far north as Middle TN and far western GA. 50s to low 60s F dewpoints will extend north into the Ohio Valley. This should support a widespread risk for severe storms across much of the central into the southeastern U.S. Saturday into early Sunday. ...Deep South/TN Valley vicinity... Forecast guidance has generally trended toward less widespread precipitation coverage Saturday morning as stronger height falls are not expected until late morning/early afternoon as the Plains trough ejects and a surface low begins to develop over the Mid-South. Persistent strong southerly low-level flow will allow for a moisture-rich boundary layer that should remain relatively pristine across southeast LA into southern/central MS/AL before convection develops by midday. Forecast soundings show cooling aloft will support steep midlevel lapse rates atop this moist boundary layer, leading to MLCAPE values perhaps approaching 2000 J/kg (decreasing with northward extent in Middle TN). Vertically veering wind profiles with strong anvil-level divergence amid moderate instability should support robust updrafts and intense supercells. Significant tornadoes, damaging gusts and large hail will be possible through the afternoon and spreading into AL during the evening/nighttime hours. Additional convection is expected to develop along an eastward-advancing cold front during the afternoon and into the overnight. An organized line of storms will pose a risk for damaging wind swaths and tornadoes across northern MS/AL into TN, eastward into GA and the western Carolinas overnight. ...Ohio Valley... Very strong deep-layer flow will be in place across the Ohio Valley on Saturday with some convection possibly ongoing from southeast Lower MI into western/central KY. The extent of severe potential is uncertain and dependent on how much precipitation occurs early in the forecast period. Too much convection early in the day could largely limit destabilization and temper the overall risk. However, if less convective contamination occurs, greater destabilization could occur ahead of a deepening surface low lifting northeast from the Mid-South to OH during the evening. Given the strength of deep-layer flow at least some risk of strong/damaging gusts within bands of thunderstorms should occur through Saturday night. ..Leitman.. 03/13/2025 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Runman292 Posted 4 hours ago Share Posted 4 hours ago Here's the AFD from MRX: 2. Severe Weather The original surface low is expected to track into Canada with another area of low pressure developing west of the Mississippi River Valley. During this time, focus will also turn towards impressive upper divergence due to a coupled jet structure Saturday afternoon. At the time of this update, the latest HREF data ends Friday evening with the FV3 and high-res NAM only reaching until 12Z Saturday. There are indications of decaying convection moving into the area Saturday morning but likely with only elevated instability. The main focus will be anytime from Saturday afternoon through Saturday night. The timing and some details will still need to be resolved with higher resolution model data, but the latest indications raise significant concerns for what will unfold. Very curved hodographs and MLCAPE over 500 J/kg are indicated during the day on Saturday with effective shear of well above 50 kts and low-level SRH of 300 to 500 m2/s2. The latest models indicate convection to be in the area Saturday afternoon, which would likely be in the form of robust supercells. This is noted even more notably to our south and west with this convection likely forming into a line and moving towards the area by the evening hours. With the environment being indicated from the NAM and other models, a severe weather outbreak with all hazards is likely in store across the region. There are still questions as to how the local environment will evolve in our area, in addition to the initiation, evolution, and coverage of convection. These details will be better resolved once more high-res model guidance is available through the event. Ahead of this potential line, most sources increase 850mb winds to in excess of 70 kts, which would present a significant damaging wind risk if these winds are brought to the surface. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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