pen_artist Posted yesterday at 01:12 PM Share Posted yesterday at 01:12 PM Large D4 30% contour for much of IL and parts of WI, IN, IA, MO, AR, TN and KY. Mention of strong tornadoes but not as strong of wording as I'd expect. Regardless, shaping up to be another all hazards possible event especially if things can remain more supercellular. ...DISCUSSION... Latest medium-range model output suggests that a significant short wave perturbation emerging from the Southwest will pivot northeast of the middle/lower Missouri Valley, into the upper Great Lakes region, Monday through Monday night. It appears that the warm sector of an associated sub-1000 mb surface cyclone will become characterized by at least moderately large CAPE, ahead of the dryline/cold front overspreading much of the middle Mississippi Valley during the afternoon into evening. In the presence of strong deep-layer shear, organized severe thunderstorm activity appears probable. It remains a bit unclear the extent to which sustained supercell development will be maintained, as opposed to convection quickly growing upscale into one or more clusters/lines, but there appears at least some potential for a few strong tornadoes, in addition to large hail and potentially widespread strong to severe wind gusts. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nvck Posted 23 hours ago Share Posted 23 hours ago Really, really rare to see this highest level contour on the CSU maps this far out Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sbnwx85 Posted 22 hours ago Share Posted 22 hours ago Thinking another QLCS tornado threat this far east is best case scenario. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A-L-E-K Posted 22 hours ago Share Posted 22 hours ago riding 3 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mob1 Posted 22 hours ago Share Posted 22 hours ago Thanks for opening a thread for this, some of the soundings for Monday look pretty wild. Obviously every severe weather threat has many failure modes, but the potential is definitely there for a high-end event. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andyhb Posted 5 hours ago Share Posted 5 hours ago Quote Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0228 AM CDT Sat Apr 25 2026 Valid 271200Z - 281200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS MONDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING ACROSS MUCH OF EASTERN IOWA...A PORTION OF SOUTHWESTERN WISCONSIN...MUCH OF EASTERN MISSOURI...ILLINOIS...WESTERN INDIANA...WESTERN KENTUCKY...WESTERN TENNESSEE...NORTHEASTERN ARKANSAS... ...SUMMARY... Widespread strong to severe thunderstorm development appears probable across the middle Mississippi into lower Ohio and Tennessee Valleys Monday afternoon and evening. At least initially, this may include several evolving supercells potentially capable of producing strong tornadoes across parts of southeastern Iowa into central through southern Illinois and adjacent east central and southeast Missouri. ...Discussion... Models indicate that significant surface cyclogenesis will proceed across the Upper Midwest/adjacent Great Lakes region during this period, as a notable short wave perturbation and associated 50-70 kt cyclonic 500 mb jet streak progress northeast of the middle/lower Missouri Valley region. Beneath a plume of warm/capping elevated mixed-layer air nosing northeastward across the middle Mississippi Valley, low-level warm sector moistening is generally forecast to contribute to moderate to strong potential instability. Although the details of the potential convective evolution remain unclear, the environment appears likely to become supportive of organized severe thunderstorm development, including supercells. Even if convection grows quickly upscale into one or more clusters/lines, embedded supercell structures will probably still pose potential for producing strong tornadoes. If an initially discrete supercell mode is maintained for a sustained period, tornadic potential could maximize, with a few long track, particularly damaging tornadoes possible. At this time, it appears that strongest thunderstorm development may initially focus in forcing for ascent associated with lower/mid-tropospheric warm advection, near the nose of the initially capping elevated mixed-layer across parts of southeastern Iowa into central Illinois. Enlarged, clockwise-curved low-level hodographs along this corridor, perhaps coinciding with a zone of stronger differential surface heating associated with a modifying outflow boundary, may become conducive to several strong tornadic supercells before convection tends to grow upscale while propagating southeastward into Monday evening. A dryline structure extending southwestward through portions of eastern Missouri may also support initially discrete supercell development, before activity tends to grow upscale ahead of an advancing cold front while spreading into the lower Ohio/Tennessee Valleys through Monday evening. ..Kerr.. 04/25/2026 Very strong wording in the latest D3 for Monday, got the feeling this ends up as a D2 MDT. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A-L-E-K Posted 1 hour ago Share Posted 1 hour ago Looks rockin 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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