Muwx
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Mister Nixon that screenshot is valid in 3 hours
Still has pretty much no chance of verifying. The kansas environment is shot
Mister Nixon that screenshot is valid in 3 hours
Mister Nixon that screenshot is valid in 3 hours
Mister Nixon that screenshot is valid in 3 hours
Non-sig 15% hail and wind risk = 70mph winds and baseball sized hail, apparently
Got an alert about Springdale getting baseball sized hail. Thankfully didn't see much beyond a few tiny pieces here in Bentonvile/Rogers.
There's a Spotter Network report on that storm of a ground-scraping wall cloud. This does have a threatening look on it, alright!View attachment 42253
Abilene Texas has a slight issue
Couldnt agree more. My main concern with this setup was if the storms would remin discrete for the LLJ.Today, cloud cover was a good thing for storm development, holding off initiation until later in the day when the dynamics are all in place. As seen with last years daytime events in the plains, we didn't really get activity going until the nighttime because initiation happened earlier than was forecast and the anvils overworked the environment for later in the evening. Not todays issue at all. The cloud cover served as a weak cap to hold off those CU fields from initiating convection too early. Combine that with slow destabilization and rapidly strengthening, perpendicular wind profiles, and you have near perfect timing for a classic tornado outbreak in the plains. Timing is always key, and that is what today was dependent on. I feel quite confident about today.
It's almost as if you shouldn't listen to one single model run and assume that's how it's going to happen. It's an ever-changing model run every hour.He’s right though, I’ve seen the HRRR go ballistic multiple times before events and show one of those upper echelon type returns. Then the actual event isn’t anything close. The HRRR is an excellent model and doesn’t overconvect, but it can feed hype machines easily. If the SPC bought those runs we’d be looking at a high risk. The environment in Kansas has a long way to go.
Today, cloud cover was a good thing for storm development, holding off initiation until later in the day when the dynamics are all in place. As seen with last years daytime events in the plains, we didn't really get activity going until the nighttime because initiation happened earlier than was forecast and the anvils overworked the environment for later in the evening. Not todays issue at all. The cloud cover served as a weak cap to hold off those CU fields from initiating convection too early. Combine that with slow destabilization and rapidly strengthening, perpendicular wind profiles, and you have near perfect timing for a classic tornado outbreak in the plains. Timing is always key, and that is what today was dependent on. I feel quite confident about today.