Mistaken, apologiesOnly thing I see near McKinney is a small shower.
Yeah, you can look at it that way.Isn’t significant tornado EF2-EF5
That is a good chart.View attachment 42553
This chart will help.
The top row is "official" rating classifications from the NWS, and the second and third are overarching classifications. Not sure where the last one comes from, but it works nonetheless.That is a good chart.
EF2...StrongView attachment 42553
This chart will help.
This also means that it may be more difficult for storms to rise up on the dryline, in North TX right? Or am I lostLooking at Skew Ts, inversion layer is honestly a bit more stout to modeled. This, along with sufficient mixing in the PBL, could help in keeping crapvection in check and actually allow for storms to stay a little more spaced.
View attachment 42555
Ridiculous vegetation damage.
Edit: This was not from the Greensburg tornadoes from last night, it was a different tornado. Not sure which one.
At the least, that means that today's ceiling has gotten at least a little bit higher.Looking at Skew Ts, inversion layer is honestly a bit more stout to modeled. This, along with sufficient mixing in the PBL, could help in keeping crapvection in check and actually allow for storms to stay a little more spaced.
View attachment 42555
Yeah a bunch of corn stalks from last years crops getting blown over isnt that wildThat's just an old corn field. I dont really see any damage in those pictures.
No, this is only relevant for OWS convection. The dryline is going to convect once the forcing mechanism arrives regardless if the inversion layer is there or not.This also means that it may be more difficult for storms to rise up on the dryline, in North TX right? Or am I lost