All Wet Posted 5 hours ago Share Posted 5 hours ago 4 hours ago, weatherwiz said: Portland may get absolutely drilled. Do you have a sense of the time frame for Portland to get "drilled"? Thinking of clearing out my (non-existant) Y2K bunker... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
weatherwiz Posted 4 hours ago Author Share Posted 4 hours ago 1 minute ago, All Wet said: Do you have a sense of the time frame for Portland to get "drilled"? Thinking of clearing out my (non-existant) Y2K bunker... There may be two rounds of storms 1) During the evening (7-11 PM) 2) Overnight (1-3 AM) Certainly may have to watch for some discrete storms to pop too with that time frame being after 5-6 PM...something to definitely watch for in terms of tornado potential, though potential for these discrete storms early may be more northwest of Portland. I know Portland is outside the enhanced and may be a bit far southwest from the greatest potential but its a damn impressive environment there well into the overnight 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chrisrotary12 Posted 4 hours ago Share Posted 4 hours ago 2 hours ago, CoastalWx said: Last winter as in this past winter?? This past winter was great. For you. Good pack retention though. Wish we weren’t capped down here. Top of My. Washington anyone? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
vortex95 Posted 3 hours ago Share Posted 3 hours ago 3 hours ago, Cyclone-68 said: Sept 1821 redux for the north? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/September_1821_New_England_tornado_outbreak Summaries I made using data from The Tornado Project. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cyclone-68 Posted 3 hours ago Share Posted 3 hours ago 6 minutes ago, vortex95 said: Summaries I made using data from The Tornado Project. That would have been one hell of a day in the modern age Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
vortex95 Posted 2 hours ago Share Posted 2 hours ago I like what I see. Typically, set ups this potent in New England only occur every 10-15 years or so, going by our most sig tor events/outbreaks. This qualifies as one IMHO, and it has been 15 years since 6/1/11. Large-scale, this is not simply NW flow ring of fire event like we had on 7/1. There is a very strong 500 low over central Quebec w/ a center that gets as low as 543 dm, which is quite impressive for July. This is *true* NW flow, the best kind for the big svr here. EML solid up to 8 C/km. Timing looks absolute best for srn Quebec, but NNE should do very well. Noted CAPE fcst as high as 4100 on HRRR near YUL Tue aftn and 0-6km shear is more than enough for mean supercells. It is not as high as it was on 6/18, but we were severely lacking in CAPE and there was no EML, so things are more than compensated here for meaty storms and "Scott spinners." A few things of note that remind me of 7/10/1989. 1) Very strong WAA prior to the event, Look at the 12z NAM 1000-500 thk 14/12z to 15/00z for BOS, it jumps from 574 to 584! 2) I attached the 12z NAM valid 15/00z. Look at the orientation of the very high thk, a W-E axis. This is exactly how it looked on 7/10/1989, except the axis was about 100 mi farther S. For that event, it was capped from just S of NYC and S. So where SPC has the sharp cut off of storms in central New England makes sense 100%. If I had to find a negative, the 925 mb winds and 0-1 km shear could be higher, at least during the daylight hours, but by 00z, it is more than enough low-level shear for spinners. However, diurnal stabilization of the BL may limit solid spinners potential in New England. But the 18z HRRR is still showing small areas over 200 0-3 km CAPE 00/01z across far NNE, which is more than enough for solid low-level stretching and thus spinners. Historically, it is very rare for New England to get sig tor after dark (F2/EF2+). One thing that is almost certain, unreal LTG shows coming for ME/NH/VT Tue evening/overnight. better than event on 7/1. EMLs "like" to do that! The fact SPC has a hatched area for tors is not that common in New England, *and* wind/hail are also hatched for the full gamut of a big svr event! Updraft helicity swaths are nasty on the HRRR, again, rare to be this intense here. SCP and SIGTOR parameters are about as high as you will ever see them in the NEUS. Interesting the storms at first look more linear during the day on the HRRR, but become somewhat more discrete by sunset. This is likely due to the improving shear profiles at low-levels, so tor risk appears good at this later time. Really not much more to say. Slicing and dicing the models down at this point is not that much use. This is a high-end set up. Everything is there for a big event. Intense tstms are a virtual guarantee, just the question is the extent of the spinners overall in srn Quebec and NNE. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tamarack Posted 2 hours ago Share Posted 2 hours ago Forgot this thread and posted the info below on the Ju-ply one: Afternoon AFD from GYX. Tomorrow evening might get interesting. Our place is on/near the boundary between levels 2/5 and 3/5. I can't recall ever being in a 3/5 area. Now to the increasing threat for severe weather, which again could be potentially significant. An Enhanced Risk (Level 3/5) of Severe Weather is in place for northern NH and the western ME mountains,a Slight Risk (Level 2/5) for central NH and the Maine interior, and a Marginal Risk (Level 1/5) for coastal ME and approaching southern NH. A potent 500mb shortwave will cross Quebec in the afternoon and evening, with its associated cold front approaching the International Border from the northwest early Tuesday evening. Increasing forced ascent, significant height falls, and strengthening wind fields aloft will set the stage for severe thunderstorms to develop with the hot and humid air mass in place, further enhanced by an elevated mixed layer that will steepen lapse rates aloft. Today`s 12Z model suite, including CAMs, continue to show deep layer shear of 50-60 kt, MUCAPE in the 2000-2500 J/kg range, and high values of DCAPE (800-1000 J/kg) brought on by some dry air/high dewpoint depressions in the low levels. This supports damaging wind gusts, and given the parameters, there`s certainly potential for these to be significant on the order of 75+ mph. In addition, the instability profiles and steep mid-level lapse rates on forecast soundings depict large hail could be to the size of golf balls or even larger. There is also enough directional shear to support a tornado threat with mean 0-1km SRH of 100-200 m^2/s^2. These hazards are all possible within discrete or semi-discrete storm mode, but the primary hazard will become damaging winds when the dominant mode becomes more linear, although a tornado within the line(s) will remain possible. For timing: there`s strong consensus among the CAMs with multiple clusters or semi-discrete developing across southern Quebec in the late afternoon to early evening with rapid upscale growth in coverage and intensity as storms approach northern NH and northwestern ME in the 6pm to 8pm time frame. Storms are expected to quickly progress to the south the rest of the evening into the early overnight hours. However, it should be noted there are hints of isolated discrete cells developing in the 4pm to 6pm timeframe that may approach from the north. Based on CAM solutions, the threat for severe weather should diminish after 2 AM, but some development of showers and a few storms is possible overnight. This is not a yearly, typical threat of severe storms, and it becomes even more dangerous as the threat continues after dark. It is highly advised to have multiple ways to receive warnings, especially ones that will wake you up with the threat continuing into the late evening and early overnight hours. The highest risk areas also include many popular camping and recreation areas, which make those who are outdoors extremely vulnerable to falling trees. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
vortex95 Posted 2 hours ago Share Posted 2 hours ago Not that many sig tor (F2/EF2+) in NNE on record. Attached is a list of the farthest N ones. Any tor documented close to the Canadian border outside the CAR area are rare. Only one since 1975 I could find is this one.ME MAY 23, 1984 1620 0k 0inj 15y 0.3m F1 SOMERSET - Homes were damaged and a barn lifted and thrown in Jackman. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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