tennessee storm chaser
Member
Thinking day 2. 45 wins hatched ?I can see them doing with a large 10% hatched and maybe D1 they go with a 15% tornado risk.
Thinking day 2. 45 wins hatched ?I can see them doing with a large 10% hatched and maybe D1 they go with a 15% tornado risk.
Definitely on the table. Last one was Easter 2020, which stayed MDT because of the uncertainty and discrepancy. Can’t wait to see the HRRR runs on this.I'd be surprised if there wasn't even a day 3 moderate.
Worth noting that, despite being a MDT all day, it became one of the largest outbreaks in American history.Definitely on the table. Last one was Easter 2020, which stayed MDT because of the uncertainty and discrepancy. Can’t wait to see the HRRR runs on this.
Yikes that’s horrifying, did you get any glimpses of the wall cloud or what it looked like?
Without a doubt. I think it was @Clancy said this could be a full on derecho. However. Models seem to be slightly breaking this up into a more discrete look.Thinking day 2. 45 wins hatched ?
Wasn't there one in 2022 or 2023?Definitely on the table. Last one was Easter 2020, which stayed MDT because of the uncertainty and discrepancy. Can’t wait to see the HRRR runs on this.
That said, there has certainly been an effort to unify some of the graphics and wording, with a lot more folks using the "Level X out of 5" phrasing.Reminder that the general public doesn't get their weather info from the SPC. They get it from their local meteorologists. Whether or not they break out the pink sharpie doesn't really matter to the general public.
I’m mainly talking about the straight line winds for Friday, as that will likely be a wind driven 15% moderate risk.I can see them doing with a large 10% hatched and maybe D1 they go with a 15% tornado risk.
I didn’t wanna say it but I was thinking the same thing. Reminds me the lead up to 5/20/19. This is definitely rivaling the components of the lead up to that event.This is absolutely an event where I can see them ending up with a 45% hatched tornado risk on D1. I can also see them maintaining a moderate risk for the event too, especially if the CAMs downtrend it hard. I think a D3 moderate risk is needed for this system based on what we’re seeing - and I absolutely believe it will become a high risk for tornadoes. But it’s definitely not impossible for a downtrend to occur with the models still.
Point is, any decent local TV met will be able to get information to his/her viewers without crying wolf. They have the same tools at their disposal as the SPC. The SPC is absolutely crucial to the weather backbone of this country but a local weatherman doesn't need a high risk to be issued to properly prepare his/her viewers for severe weather.That said, there has certainly been an effort to unify some of the graphics and wording, with a lot more folks using the "Level X out of 5" phrasing.
Absolutely!Point is, any decent local TV met will be able to get information to his/her viewers without crying wolf. They have the same tools at their disposal as the SPC. The SPC is absolutely crucial to the weather backbone of this country but a local weatherman doesn't need a high risk to be issued to properly prepare his/her viewers for severe weather.
I didn't mean to strike a political chord with my choice of phrasing. I think NOAA and the NWS are invaluable and I hate seeing them gutted. I'm extremely pro science, truth, and reason if that tells you anything.
Edit: All i'm trying to say, is it's a reasonable conversation to consider changing the day 3 risk from moderate to high.
This is about the only thing I can see stopping this from being a significant weather event. Problem is if the capping is too much storms could initiate into the night and by then you’d still have high kinematics for tornadoes that could be significant.I still think the main question and point if possible failure for Saturday is in the morning convection and how it affects the later stuff. The CAMs will be useful to spitball that.