AmericanWxFreak Posted 22 hours ago Share Posted 22 hours ago Collapse with entrapment in Marriotsville down the road from me 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wxmeddler Posted 22 hours ago Share Posted 22 hours ago 7 minutes ago, AdamHLG said: Two years ago we were hit by a direct strike and it caused $70k of damage to our house. It is incredible how the perspective changes once that has happened. Holy cow, did you ever figure out the polarity and amperage? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AdamHLG Posted 21 hours ago Share Posted 21 hours ago Holy cow, did you ever figure out the polarity and amperage?No, but here is the remnants of the tree stump after the strike once it was cleaned up. The charge followed the landscape lighting wires into the house, blew up the transformer, electrified my server rack and network, blew out 3 computers, all my cat6 gear, and then some. It also scared the living **** out of us as we were home. Now I have PTSD and when severe storms strike I’m wishing it not to hit us. I’ll never forget it. Insurance paid for it all. . 6 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AmericanWxFreak Posted 21 hours ago Share Posted 21 hours ago Additional photos from this evening - one of the best storms in the last two seasons of living here. 14 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
The Dude Posted 21 hours ago Share Posted 21 hours ago 1 hour ago, MN Transplant said: Ah connective season. That means a trace of rain and thunder somewhere in the distance. Speak for yourself. I got .02"! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kmlwx Posted 14 hours ago Author Share Posted 14 hours ago 8 hours ago, Maestrobjwa said: Snow is tricky enough, but severe is it's own brand of tricky...might wanna leave it to @Kmlwx and company, lol You're too kind - I'm just the moron who starts the thread ever year. I'll give all the accolades to the pros! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MN Transplant Posted 10 hours ago Share Posted 10 hours ago Storm reports from yesterday Location County State Comments 4 NNW New Market Shenandoah VA Multiple trees down across southern Shenandoah County. (LWX) 4 NNW New Market Shenandoah VA Tree was down along Quicksburg Lane and Middle Brook Lane. (LWX) Stephens City Frederick VA A couple trees were down around Stephens City (LWX) 4 NNW Boyce Clarke VA A tree was down along Salem Church Road. (LWX) Berryville Clarke VA Tree was down along Main Street in Berryville. (LWX) Taylorstown Loudoun VA A tree was down along Taylorstown Road and had to be removed from the roadway. (LWX) Lucketts Loudoun VA A shed was blown onto the roadway in Lucketts. (LWX) 1 SSW Woodsboro Frederick MD Barn roof blown off and wires down in the 10400 block of MD-194 Woodsboro Pike. (LWX) 3 W Dickerson Loudoun VA Trees down on eastbound VA-662 Lost Corner Road near Spinks Ferry Road. (LWX) 3 NW Clarksburg Montgomery MD Trees down blocking MD-355 Frederick Road near Prescott Road. (LWX) 1 E Linwood Carroll MD Several large tree limbs down along MD-84 South Clear Ridge Road north of MD-75 Green Valley Road. (LWX) Clarksburg Montgomery MD Trees down on MD-355 Frederick Road at Stringtown Road. (LWX) 4 ESE Park Mills Frederick MD A tree was down along Linthicum Road. (LWX) 1 ESE Linwood Carroll MD Multiple trees... wires... and large limbs down near the intersection of MD-84 South Clear Ridge Road and MD-75 Green Valley Road. (LWX) 3 SSW Damascus Montgomery MD Numerous large tree limbs several inches in diameter snapped and blew in from neighbor's yard. (LWX) Damascus Montgomery MD Several shingles and shutters blown off house just east of downtown Damascus. (LWX) 1 ESE Linwood Carroll MD Multiple trees... wires... and large limbs down near the intersection of MD-84 South Clear Ridge Road and MD-75 Green Valley Road. (LWX) 2 ESE Damascus Montgomery MD Large tree down on Hawkins Creamery Road. (LWX) 4 ESE Friendship Howard MD Trees down blocking MD-94 Woodbine Road near Annapolis Rock Road. (LWX) 1 ESE Westminster Carroll MD Large branches down near the intersection of Key Street and North Street. (LWX) 3 SSW Poplar Springs Howard MD Multiple trees and wires down on MD-94 Woodbine Road near Florence Road... and across western Howard County to MD-144 Frederick Road. (LWX) 1 ESE Germantown Montgomery MD Several trees and wires down in the Germantown/Gaithersburg area. (LWX) 1 ESE Lisbon Howard MD Several windows blown out... numerous trees down... and siding damage to at least one house near the intersection of Daisy Road and MD-144 Frederick Road. (LWX) 2 ESE Lisbon Howard MD Trees and wires down along MD-144 Frederick Road between Morgan Station Road and MD-97 Roxbury Mills Road. (LWX) 2 NNE Glenwood Howard MD Trees down near the intersection of MD-97 Roxbury Mills Road and MD-144 Frederick Road. (LWX) 2 N Glenwood Howard MD Trees down on Bushy Park Road between MD-144 Frederick Road and Millers Mill Road. (LWX) 2 WNW West Friendship Howard MD Trees down on MD-144 Frederick Road near Pfefferkorn Road. (LWX) 2 NW West Friendship Howard MD Numerous trees topped on Underwood Road. (LWX) 2 WSW Henryton Howard MD Large trees down on Howard Lodge Driver... River Road... and Taylor Park Road. (LWX) 2 SSE Sykesville Howard MD Trees and wires down along MD-32 Sykesville Road between River Road and Deer Hill Road. (LWX) 1 S Marriottsville Howard MD Trees down onto houses in the 1300 to 1500 block of Driver Road. (LWX) 1 NNW Henryton Carroll MD Trees and large branches down on Henrytown Road approaching Arrington Road. (LWX) 1 E Lochearn Baltimore MD Several calls for trees/wires down near Lochearn... including at and Wildwood Avenue and Lochearn Drive. (LWX) 2 SSE Pikesville Baltimore City MD Tree and lines down on Cross Country Boulevard. (LWX) 1 ESE Pikesville Baltimore MD Several calls for trees/wires down in the Pikesville area... including near the intersection of Greenspring Avenue and Quarry Lake Drive (LWX) 3 NW Langford Kent MD Tree down blocking a road in the community of Fairlee. Time estimated from radar. (PHI) 2 SE North East Cecil MD Two trees down on Irishtown Road and two trees down on Frenchtown Road. (LWX) 3 SSW Poplar Springs Howard MD Multiple trees and wires down on MD-94 Woodbine Road near Florence Road... and across western Howard County to MD-144 Frederick Road. (LWX) 2 SSE Sykesville Howard MD Trees and wires down along MD-32 Sykesville Road between River Road and Deer Hill Road. (LWX) 2 E North East Cecil MD A wind gust of 51 knots (59 MPH) was measured by a mesonet at the North East Landfill (DE052). (LWX) 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kmlwx Posted 8 hours ago Author Share Posted 8 hours ago CSU-MLP really lit up for big chunk of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast for Monday. Not major - but 15% 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nomz Posted 8 hours ago Share Posted 8 hours ago 8 minutes ago, Kmlwx said: CSU-MLP really lit up for big chunk of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast for Monday. Not major - but 15% We also got a 15% on the d5 from the SPC Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
yoda Posted 8 hours ago Share Posted 8 hours ago 6 minutes ago, Nomz said: We also got a 15% on the d5 from the SPC Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
yoda Posted 8 hours ago Share Posted 8 hours ago Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0315 AM CDT Thu Mar 12 2026 Valid 151200Z - 201200Z ...DISCUSSION... ...Day 4/Sunday - ArkLaTex/Lower MS Valley into the Middle MS/Lower OH Valleys... An intense upper trough will deepen over the Plains and shift east to the MS Valley on Sunday. From late afternoon into the nighttime hours, an 80-100 kt jet streak will develop within the base of the trough and overspread portions of the region. At the surface, an already strong cyclone will deepen further as it moves from the Lower MO Valley to the Lower Great Lakes vicinity. As this occurs, a strong cold front will sweep eastward across the southern Plains and much of the Midwest and Southern U.S., becoming oriented from Ohio to the FL Panhandle by Monday morning. While strengthening southerly low-level flow will develop ahead of the front, stronger Gulf moisture return will be confined to TX and the Lower MS Valley vicinity, with mainly 50s dewpoints expected with northward extent across the Middle MS and OH Valley regions. Furthermore, capping is expected ahead of the cold front, potentially limiting warm sector convection. Nevertheless, modest moisture and steepening midlevel lapse rates will support at least weak destabilization very near the cold front. A narrow line of strongly-forced convection is expected to develop along the cold front and move across portions of OK/TX into the Middle/Lower MS and Lower OH/TN Valley regions. Given intense deep-layer flow near and just behind the cold front, strong/damaging wind potential will exist within a modest instability/high shear environment. A 15 percent severe delineation has been included from the ArkLaTex into the Mid-South/Lower MS Valley vicinity. Depending on low-level moisture/instability trends, this area may need to be expanded north and east into a larger portion of the Middle MS/Lower OH/TN Valley vicinity in subsequent outlooks. ...Day 5/Monday - Southeast to Mid-Atlantic... Severe thunderstorm potential will likely continue into Monday as the intense upper trough continues to migrate east from the MS Valley toward the Eastern Seaboard. Intense deep-layer southwesterly flow will overspread portions of the Southeast to the Mid-Atlantic. Meanwhile, 60s F dewpoints will extend from southeast GA northward through the Mid-Atlantic ahead of a sharp cold front. Pre-frontal surface troughing across the VA/NC Piedmont also will support backing low-level winds, leading to enhanced low-level shear. Depending on how much cloud cover and warm advection precipitation occurs ahead of the cold front, stronger destabilization may be inhibited. Nevertheless, at least weak instability is forecast ahead of a strongly forced line of convection along the eastward-advancing cold front. This activity alone could produce a swath of strong to severe wind gusts. A more conditional risk of supercells across the warm sector exists across eastern VA/NC, but this is more uncertain. Given damaging wind potential with the strongly forced linear convection, a 15 percent severe delineation has been added for portions of the region. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kmlwx Posted 8 hours ago Author Share Posted 8 hours ago Honestly the orientation if nothing else of the precip on the models reminds me of some dynamic spring systems. Definitely eyebrow raising to get a Day 5 15%. I'm still not convinced it will be anything substantial, though. We'll see how it looks in NAM range. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
yoda Posted 1 hour ago Share Posted 1 hour ago Afternoon AFD from LWX on the threat KEY MESSAGE 3...Another strong cold front will arrive early next week, bringing strong winds and the potential for severe thunderstorms. A warm front will lift toward the area Sunday ahead of a low pressure system moving into the Great Lakes. Most of the day should remain dry, but showers will likely move into the area Sunday night. Increasing southeast to south winds will keep temperatures above normal. A strong cold front associated with a powerful low pressure across the western Great Lks will cross the area Monday. Better moisture recovery is expected ahead of this front compared to the one Friday night to result in numerous showers and scattered thunderstorms. Model trends during the past 24 hrs have shown lower pressure values locally across the area, stronger wind speeds aloft, and better destabilization resulting in an increasing threat for severe weather. The storm mode looks mostly linear this time as opposed to supercells, but the magnitude of the 850-500 mb winds is 20-30 kt stronger than it was yesterday (Wednesday). While the kinematics look a lot stronger with this next system, there is still a high degree of uncertainty with the thermodynamic environment and the exact timing of the frontal passage with recent trends showing an earlier frontal passage prior to peak diurnal heating. Regardless of severe weather, strong winds will accompany this front both in the pre-frontal and post-frontal environment. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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