powderfreak Posted 2 hours ago Share Posted 2 hours ago Absolutely pouring. I thought the rain shield was down south and wondering why we are getting soaked. Can’t miss right now. 1 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bristolri_wx Posted 2 hours ago Share Posted 2 hours ago Looks like some lower level dry air or mid level dry air knocking down what’s attempting to fall in SNE? The look on radar between KOKX and KBOX is significant in SNE areas… Glad we are getting some rain regardless! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Damage In Tolland Posted 1 hour ago Author Share Posted 1 hour ago Torch ! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
metagraphica Posted 1 hour ago Share Posted 1 hour ago 22 minutes ago, Damage In Tolland said: Torch ! OooOOOh....RED. A 40-50% chance that we might be above normal. Could be 0.1 above normal, or +15 above normal, or not above normal at all. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
vortex95 Posted 1 hour ago Share Posted 1 hour ago IL had 20+ tornado reports yesterday, and the state is now over 190 for the year (*reports*, not actual tornadoes, there are duplicate reports in this total). Attached is a map for the bigger state totals through 6/19. The disparity is amazing. Why IL only so much more? It's not like when an area is soaked or buried repeatedly w/ rain/snow. That is more on the synoptic level and areal coverage is larger. When you get down to a local level, such as an area that is about avg size for a U.S. state, that's not the same for scale. And to get tornadoes, it is a lot more conditional (harder) than say a lot of heavy rain or snow over an extended period (CoastalWx would disagree about the heavy snow!). But given the vagaries of the atmosphere/patterns and given enough time, you are going to see things due to the law of large numbers and averages. Just pointing this out b/c some try to assign a specific meaning or cause, where sometimes there is none. Yes, I know of the hypothesis that tornado alley is shifting E, but we really do not have enough solid data IMHO. Tornadoes, esp. weak and short-lived ones, were severely under-counted prior to the 1990s since storm chasing was not yet mainstream, WSR-88Ds did not exist for operational use, nor did the Internet (at least in widespread use). ~35 years of data is not enough time to establish a trend either way. I would argue that it wasn't until 2010 or so when we started to get close to actual number of tornadoes that occur every year in the U.S. w/ the advent of the smartphone and dual-polarization radar. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ineedsnow Posted 47 minutes ago Share Posted 47 minutes ago We pour! About damn time! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ineedsnow Posted 43 minutes ago Share Posted 43 minutes ago That storm that is severe warned in NJ looks a bit interesting Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dendrite Posted 42 minutes ago Share Posted 42 minutes ago Just started and dumping. Love it. 63F +RA 0.17" 2.14"/hr Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Damage In Tolland Posted 39 minutes ago Author Share Posted 39 minutes ago Been raining since 10:30 .04 on the day dry under trees Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
metagraphica Posted 12 minutes ago Share Posted 12 minutes ago Light rain just a bit ago while out running errands. Temp down to 66 from a high of 71. Anti-Stein Anti-Torch ASAT Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cyclone-68 Posted 11 minutes ago Share Posted 11 minutes ago 1 hour ago, vortex95 said: IL had 20+ tornado reports yesterday, and the state is now over 190 for the year (*reports*, not actual tornadoes, there are duplicate reports in this total). Attached is a map for the bigger state totals through 6/19. The disparity is amazing. Why IL only so much more? It's not like when an area is soaked or buried repeatedly w/ rain/snow. That is more on the synoptic level and areal coverage is larger. When you get down to a local level, such as an area that is about avg size for a U.S. state, that's not the same for scale. And to get tornadoes, it is a lot more conditional (harder) than say a lot of heavy rain or snow over an extended period (CoastalWx would disagree about the heavy snow!). But given the vagaries of the atmosphere/patterns and given enough time, you are going to see things due to the law of large numbers and averages. Just pointing this out b/c some try to assign a specific meaning or cause, where sometimes there is none. Yes, I know of the hypothesis that tornado alley is shifting E, but we really do not have enough solid data IMHO. Tornadoes, esp. weak and short-lived ones, were severely under-counted prior to the 1990s since storm chasing was not yet mainstream, WSR-88Ds did not exist for operational use, nor did the Internet (at least in widespread use). ~35 years of data is not enough time to establish a trend either way. I would argue that it wasn't until 2010 or so when we started to get close to actual number of tornadoes that occur every year in the U.S. w/ the advent of the smartphone and dual-polarization radar. That is a pretty amazing disparity. I hope an angry God isn’t the cause. Ha Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HIPPYVALLEY Posted 8 minutes ago Share Posted 8 minutes ago Steady light rain here since about 1pm. Just what the gardens needed! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Typhoon Tip Posted 2 minutes ago Share Posted 2 minutes ago Approaching 600 dm non-hydrostats is nuts since the shit version of the GFS in 2017 was retired... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dendrite Posted just now Share Posted just now 60.7F 0.30" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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