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cyclone77

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Everything posted by cyclone77

  1. Keep in mind even if JoMo is okay (and I sure hope he is), unfortunately there's a very good chance he may have family and friends who may not have been so lucky.
  2. Ahhh, what the hell? I didn't even see that lol. Yeah that's pretty sweet right there.
  3. I'd like to see a sounding for northern Illinois the afternoon the F5 tornado hit Plainfield Illinois. There had to be a lot of instability that day, as I recall reports saying how hot and humid it was. The storm moved southeast, so it probably attained some enhanced SRH, so mid and upper winds may not have been too impressive. Still would be an interesting sounding I think.
  4. The last one they have listed is from 0300. There's surely been more since then.
  5. I meant about to cross into North Carolina, not Virginia.
  6. Just unbelievable that the Tuscaloosa storm is still likely producing tornadoes as it's about to enter Virginia. These videos are incredible as well. Camera technology has come a long ways since the Andover tornado too. EDIT: Woops meant North Carolina lol.
  7. I can't remember seeing horizontal vorticies from a perspective like that before. Simply incredible.
  8. I switched over to the Atlanta radar on GR2. The couplet southwest of Rome Georgia is still raging. What an absolute BEAST of a supercell.
  9. The couplet southeast of Ashville Alabama looks pretty strong again. Amazing that the storm is still going strong this far away from Tuscaloosa.
  10. Just incredible parameters over Alabama right now. 1km EHI over 12, 3km EHI over 14. Effective SRH over 700m2/s2! Effective tornado at 11.
  11. Absolutely sickening. Sure hope the folks down there took this event seriously.
  12. The above posted WRF model seems to agree with the HRRR. Looking at the amount of convection over the Mississippi Valley it's probably safe to say we're gonna see a lot of leftover convection early tomorrow. What's interesting is both the WRF and HRRR lay out an east/west boundary over central Mississippi and Alabama later tomorrow morning. This will no doubt retreat northward towards the Tennessee border by afternoon. This boundary may interact with and help enhance powerful supercells where it lays out tomorrow afternoon.
  13. The northern threat is definitely a bit tricky. The new GFS would indicate the best tornado parameters stay further south like some of the earlier NAM runs indicated. Areas of Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee and Kentucky are definitely looking like the most likely areas for significant severe tomorrow. Further north may have a lot to do with how tonight's convection evolves. That will no doubt influence exactly if and where that secondary low develops/evolves.
  14. Might as well change the title of this thread to just the 27th now that we have a 26th thread.
  15. Mods feel free to move my last few posts to the new thread for Tuesday.
  16. Yeah it's looking pretty ugly in that area. FWIW the long range RUC forecasts cape in excess of 5000j/kg in this highly sheared environment over northeast Texas late tomorrow. Likely overdone, but I'm sure we'll be seeing monster sups traversing northeast Texas/southeast Oklahoma later tomorrow....
  17. Pretty sick forecast soundings coming out of far southeast Oklahoma/northeast Texas tomorrow evening. This event won't be as widespread as what will happen Wednesday, but some strong tornadoes look quite possible over some of the same areas that were impacted today. 00z NAM forecast sounding over far southeast Oklahoma tomorrow evening...
  18. Very impressive theta-e feeding due north underneath the very powerful west-southwesterly 100kt+ H5 jet. Just wow.
  19. The forecast soundings from northern Alabama into Kentucky are pretty scary Wednesday afternoon. So much potential. Sure hope people in those areas are aware of what's coming.
  20. All I can say is wow looking at some of the forecast soundings for Wednesday. There are some huge differences between the NAM and GFS. The NAM develops a secondary southern low, and really limits instability further north. The GFS paints a completely different scenario further north with much more instability, as it doesn't develop this southern low. Right now I'd lean towards the NAM, as I feel it handled today's setup considerably better than the GFS. Northeast Mississippi/northern Alabama and parts of Tennessee look pretty dangerous Wednesday afternoon.
  21. Unless something changes I'm out for Monday. There's just too much precip/clouds in the warm sector north of the Arkansas border which will severely limit instability. Down in Arkansas this shouldn't be an issue. The storms that blow up down there will likely pivot northeastward into southern and eastern Missouri, and the southern Illinois after dark.
  22. The new 21z SREF holds out a little hope for areas further north.
  23. 00z NAM says forget about chasing Monday anywhere north of Oklahoma or Arkansas.
  24. Monday's setup looks pretty conditional over Missouri and the southern half of Illinois. The NAM has quite a bit of clouds and precip in the warm sector during the day, which severely limits instability. The GFS is less bullish with this, and therefore creates a better scenario for this area. The 18z GFS is actually pretty nice as it has a stronger surface low over Missouri as well as modest instability in the warm sector. Shear profiles are pretty good over eastern Missouri into central/southern Illinois. As Janet mentioned the St. Louis area would again be a hot spot if the GFS pans out. Hopefully as time goes on we'll see less and less precip shown in the warm sector, but I'm not very confident that will happen.
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