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Sydney Claridge

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Posts posted by Sydney Claridge

  1. 5 minutes ago, HillsdaleMIWeather said:

    Surprise Ohio TOR

    
    The National Weather Service in Cleveland has issued a
    
    * Tornado Warning for...
      Southeastern Knox County in north central Ohio...
    
    * Until 645 PM EDT.
    
    * At 611 PM EDT, a severe thunderstorm capable of producing a tornado
      was located near Mount Vernon, moving southeast at 25 mph.
    
      HAZARD...Tornado and quarter size hail.
    
      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.
    

    There is also a severe-warned storm behind this one (Marion, OH area).  Would not be surprised if that one could clip the northeastern portions of the Columbus area only if that storm takes a right-turn.

    Ingredients for tornadoes are much better in northern Illinois per SPC mesoanalysis.  Watch those storms west of Rochelle and Rockford as they move east, could be a concern as they approach Chicagoland.

  2. 5 minutes ago, Arishtat said:

    Just curious, you mean the one north, or the one south of town? Still trying to learn to read radar. 

    Even though the one to the south is the tornado producer, that storm to the north of Streator (near Ottawa) still bears watching as it is moving straight for the Chicago metro area.

  3. Aside from the risk for hail, tornadoes, and wind, I am getting very concerned about flooding potential near and west of Bowie, TX.  These storms have stalled over this area for quite some time, with heavy precipitation, and they may only now be starting to increase their forward motion.  There are also other storms behind this complex as well.

    The big question is whether this complex will take a right turn and impact the northern areas of the Metroplex.

  4. I'm starting to wonder if SPC overestimated the effects of the outflow boundary with respect to their re-positioning of the ENH risk earlier.  The significant hail is currently materializing north of the ENH risk and the hatching, but that storm SW of Bellevue, TX still bears watching, especially if it becomes a right-mover.  That storm has just taken on supercellular characteristics (including a hook), so it may take a right turn pretty soon.

     

    EDIT: couplet SW of Bellevue:

     

    4A77B178-84F6-46CD-9868-596324157762.jpeg

  5. Looks like there is a major hail storm ongoing northwest of Wichita Falls now, it is warned for up to 3-inch hail.  There may be some additional attempts at convective initation in the Graham/Jacksboro area per radar and satellite imagery; some of the ingredients there seem better for severe weather (supercell composite, SigTor, EHI, etc.), compared with southern OK, although that Red River storm is in a perfect position to produce large hail.

  6. The question will be how much further south the OFB gets before storms initiate (which will be a while).  Though not the most current, satellite imagery clearly shows the OFB location just south of the Red River.  SPC thinks that the boundary will eventually stall; needless to say I'm going to get a bit concerned about severe storms particularly if the OFB stalls out near the Metroplex, since the OFB may very well be the focal point for afternoon severe storms.

    1kmv.gif.37b1d33d20b3086fc79d65e05d157895.gif

  7. 2 hours ago, WhiteoutWX said:

    With the MCS already nearing the edge of the enhanced me thinks they’ll be trimming that a bit.

    Yep, the 10% with SigTor hatching was just removed and the ENH was shifted southwards somewhat.  On the flip side, the hatching for significant hail now covers much of the Metroplex (30% hatched), with a 5% tornado probability on top of that.

  8. That storm is moving straight for the Columbus metro area.  Fortunately the ingredients today are not the most favorable for anything more than brief tornadoes, but it is always something to watch when a major metropolitan area is downstream from a potentially tornadic thunderstorm.

    • Like 1
  9. 13 minutes ago, pbrussell said:

    Iowa’s blowing up 

    Have definitely seen what seem to be some supercell structures on radar there, but overall the storm mode in Iowa seems messy right now.

    Obviously today is not a slam-dunk severe weather day, being only a slight risk, but if anything the most intense storm near New Virginia, IA looks to be a possible HP supercell given its radar signature.

  10. 15 minutes ago, TexMexWx said:

    Welp. I was thinking the storm would go south through Denton and Tarrant counties but it's taken an interesting turn to the east and looks like it'll hit here in southern Collin County... warned for 65 mph winds and ping pong ball sized hail.

    Those storms are definitely outflow-dominant now.  The outflow boundary has surged well ahead of the storms, and is currently over central Dallas County and southern Tarrant County (and is just north of the KFWS radar site).  If these storms had maintained unimpeded inflow at or near the surface we would probably be having a major hailstorm over DFW right now, but fortunately that outflow surged out ahead of the storms.

  11. Interestingly enough there might be some outflow out ahead of this storm, from west of Thackerville over to Muenster and Bowie (which is evident on the KFWS radar).  Might be a sign of a possible weakening trend, but this does not appear ahead of the lead storm over Thackerville.

  12. 8 minutes ago, cheese007 said:

    Do wonder if that storm could make it intact to the metroplex

    Hopefully the hail potential winds down somewhat before then, but you can never count on that (the cap is one finicky beast at times).  Collapsing storms can also produce damaging wind gusts on occasion, so even if the hail threat diminishes, there is that risk (although this storm is already capable of damaging wind as it is).  I would not be surprised to see a local extension of the severe thunderstorm watch into Tarrant and Dallas counties.

  13. There is now a hailstorm capable of significant hail (2"+) about to move from southern Oklahoma into Montague and Cooke counties in north-central Texas.  Could even be some rotation trying to form on this storm.  If the current motion continues it may try to move towards Denton County (and the northern portions of the Metroplex) if it can hold together that long.

    EDIT: severe thunderstorm warning for eastern Montague and all of Cooke County.  It is warned for 2-inch hail and 65 mph wind gusts (OK warning included concern for 3-inch hail).  Steve McCauley (on his Facebook page) is saying that the storms should be able to survive into (at least) the northern DFW area.

  14. This pattern would have been good for winter in the Northeast, too bad it came too late.  At the same time however, western ridging in the winter would have meant reduced mountain snowpacks and worse drought.  A return of the Pacific "blob" would be good for big-time Northeastern snowstorms but very bad for western water supplies, especially outside of the coastal Pacific Northwest where the warmer water can serve to increase the amount of moisture available to a storm system.

    Eastern troughing and western ridging has killed severe weather seasons in many recent years.  If I recall correctly, 2013 had somewhat of a late start to the Plains severe weather season, but once it got going in May, we had some very powerful tornadoes in Oklahoma, including the most recent EF5 on record (Moore, OK), not to mention the El Reno tornado (that would also have been an EF5 if it had it hit structures).  There have been strong and violent tornadoes in Dixie Alley so far, and a persistence of the eastern troughing pattern would lead me to believe that areas on the southern and eastern flanks of the trough, namely Dixie and the Carolinas, would remain prone to potential tornado events through May, especially with warmer-than-average Gulf of Mexico water temperatures.  Perhaps with some northward shifts into the Ohio Valley and southern Great Lakes region as warmer air gains a foothold in that region.

    The Plains might very well be stuck with northwest flow in this pattern.  Provided sufficient moisture, severe thunderstorms (and possible derechos) on the rim of the building western heat are a possibility, particularly if this western ridging/eastern troughing pattern continues into summer.  I would also watch to see if the High Plains EML gets advected further east into any regions favorable for severe weather that are on the southern and eastern rim of the troughing.  Western ridging that affects the Rocky Mountains and High Plains could be favorable for making a stronger EML, but this might also kill severe weather events as well, if the cap is too strong.

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