• Welcome to TalkWeather!
    We see you lurking around TalkWeather! Take the extra step and join us today to view attachments, see less ads and maybe even join the discussion.
    CLICK TO JOIN TALKWEATHER

Severe WX Severe threat 3/30-3/31

00z NAM shows what would likely be a tornado outbreak Sunday evening/overnight from central IL and IN southward to E AR, MS, and AL. Dangerous looking surge in the parameter space happens post-00z along the LLJ axis with mid-upper 60s dewpoints and steep mid level lapse rates. Also shows a very discrete storm mode which makes sense given the relatively subtle nature of the forcing.
 
00z NAM shows what would likely be a tornado outbreak Sunday evening/overnight from central IL and IN southward to E AR, MS, and AL. Dangerous looking surge in the parameter space happens post-00z along the LLJ axis with mid-upper 60s dewpoints and steep mid level lapse rates. Also shows a very discrete storm mode which makes sense given the relatively subtle nature of the forcing.
Oof… @andyhb has spoken. Listen up
 
00z NAM shows what would likely be a tornado outbreak Sunday evening/overnight from central IL and IN southward to E AR, MS, and AL. Dangerous looking surge in the parameter space happens post-00z along the LLJ axis with mid-upper 60s dewpoints and steep mid level lapse rates. Also shows a very discrete storm mode which makes sense given the relatively subtle nature of the forcing.
Hoping for not another nocturnal tornado outbreak. They don’t end well…
 
This is really the first run that has shifted somewhat significantly NW. For the more experienced folks, do you expect this to be an outlier or do you envision a return to previous high level storm placement in the AR/TN/MS/AL area as the new model runs come online?
 
Last edited:
This is really the first run that has shifted somewhat significantly NW. For the more experienced folks, do you expect this to be an outlier or do you envision a return to previous high level storm placement in the AR/TN/MS/AL area as the new model runs come online?
In general, this is gonna be a widespread event. So while the placement of high end storm potential is still in flux, I can imagine a Level 4 Moderate Risk from Illinois down into Arkansas, TN, MS, and Alabama. A bit like we saw with the March 14th event.
 
It seems like that March has been very active over the past 4 or so years. 2021, 2022, 2023, and now 2025.

March 2021....139 tornadoes
March 2022....234 tornadoes
March 2023....197 tornadoes
March 2024....55 tornadoes
March 2025....166 tornadoes*

*There will probably be significantly more tornadoes as we wrap up March.
 
Last edited:
3:00 A.M./ Lawerence Co. TN./ and the NAM shows fairly substantial parmeters this run. 0-1km at 320 SRH and 3D Cape at 183 would be significant if it was to verify and the surface winds were to back more IMO. ML Cape at 2272 and a Td at 67F at that time of the night raises a concern.


1743220804771.png
 
3:00 A.M./ Lawerence Co. TN./ and the NAM shows fairly substantial parmeters this run. 0-1km at 320 SRH and 3D Cape at 183 would be significant if it was to verify and the surface winds were to back more IMO. ML Cape at 2272 and a Td at 67F at that time of the night raises a concern.


View attachment 37605
Impressive sounding, But when you see the red lines like that on the left thats indicative of a contaminated sounding means the enviroment may not be entirely accurate from that sounding.
 
3:00 A.M./ Lawerence Co. TN./ and the NAM shows fairly substantial parmeters this run. 0-1km at 320 SRH and 3D Cape at 183 would be significant if it was to verify and the surface winds were to back more IMO. ML Cape at 2272 and a Td at 67F at that time of the night raises a concern.


View attachment 37605
This sounding is convectively contaminated.

Seeing Omega values that high, along with the almost completely saturated vertical profile, this sounding was taken inside or near an updraft.

It’s nice to look at where the updraft velocities peak between 700-500mb though.
 
Back
Top