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5/15(northern half) & 5/16(southern half of subforum) Severe Wx Threats


largetornado
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23 minutes ago, HillsdaleMIWeather said:

That supercell takes basically the same track as the Palm Sunday F4s, eerie. hrrr_ref_frzn_ncus_31.thumb.png.905bb9285e66c2f3ef37d2d1219c7b0d.png

That was my thought as well. But this one would have a bit more of a northerly component compared to those storms. Coworker of mine told me her story of surviving the Palm Sunday f4 just a few months ago.

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00z HRRR gets way too warm down south, outflowy/hail-driven mess if that's the case. Still has a few supercells in Wisconsin.

Edit: And shows what would likely be a major severe weather outbreak on Friday across the OV/Mid South.

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  • largetornado changed the title to 5/15(northern half) & 5/16(southern half of subforum) Severe Wx Threats
18 minutes ago, HillsdaleMIWeather said:

Enhanced risk expanded slightly south and further east to Detroit, 30% sig wind introduced over Northern Indiana and Southern Michigan. They're expecting mature supercell's ahead of the line so some areas could have a tornado threat and then damaging wind right behind it 

High-end enhanced. Surprised they didn’t go moderate, but makes sense. 

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I didn't see it on the previous outlooks (maybe I missed it) but there's a 10% hatched tornado probs for WI thru NE IL and NW IN. Pretty narrow corridor due to the expectation of the discrete cells transitioning to a linear complex quickly, I'd imagine. Should be an interesting day.

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Most of the high res guidance has this now.

Yep. That’s a game changer right there.

Large hail/wind threat looks tops today. Tor threat is still pretty low, as spreads are too high around here. This isn’t Colorado…. 92/65 isn’t gonna cut it. But, now that I said that…
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I know wording should always be taken with a grain of salt but this is from Paul Sirvatka at College of DuPage. Maybe a little overzealous but still eye catching nonetheless: 

ATTENTION:
The following is a message from COD Meteorology Staff...

THREAT:
Explosive thunderstorms are expected to develop late this afternoon across northeast Illinois.

TIMING:
Expect the first and most significant storms to move across DuPage County in the 4-6PM time range with additional development into the evening.

AREAS AFFECTED:
Storms will be numerous across the entire Chicago metropolitan area but the exact impacts on College of DuPage are not exactly known.

DETAILED INFORMATION:
Near-record warmth and rising dew points will bring us our first real taste of summer today, with heat indices climbing into the 90s this afternoon. An upper-level disturbance, combined with an approaching dryline, will lead to at least scattered thunderstorm development during the afternoon rush.

In what will be an extremely unstable atmosphere, any storms that form will be capable of producing very strong winds and large to very large hail, with hailstones potentially exceeding 2 inches in diameter. Depending on how low-level winds evolve, a few tornadoes will be possible—including the potential for strong (EF2+) tornadoes across the region.

Additional storms may develop after the initial round and track through the Chicago metro during the early evening hours before conditions turn drier and windier overnight.

Tomorrow, while the threat is expected to be less intense, scattered severe storms remain possible in the afternoon ahead of a cold front. That front will bring cooler and drier air to the region overnight Friday.

⚠️ Reminder: We will move people to shelter in the event of a tornado warning affecting any COD campus, or if a severe thunderstorm produces 2.5” hail or winds of 80 mph. Please stay alert to evolving forecasts and warnings.

Stay safe and prepared!

Paul Sirvatka
Professor of Meteorology
College of DuPage – NEXLAB
 

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2 hours ago, Chicago Storm said:


Yep. That’s a game changer right there.

Large hail/wind threat looks tops today. Tor threat is still pretty low, as spreads are too high around here. This isn’t Colorado…. 92/65 isn’t gonna cut it. But, now that I said that…

If temperatures are held down a few degrees from the HRRR soundings (which the current clouds over southern Wisconsin might help with) we could be in business. However 12Z CAMs trended to a messier mode around here. Only the RRFS still maintains more spaced out cells.

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