• 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 April 11th-13th, 2020 Severe Weather Threat

So....if I live on a mountain, outside Dunlap, TN, in a manufactured home...I don't need to worry as much? I'm just learning how to interpret all the data...so...I ask those that know...thanks in advance.
 
I’m more impressed with the southern MS cell at the moment. Not as HP and messy.

Low level lapse rates are a bit better down there...
 
DISCUSSION...Recent 7 and 9 km CAPPI radar imagery suggests that the
storms across southern/central MS have intensified. It appears that
the low-level inversion present on the 18Z JAN sounding that may
have been hampering robust updraft development has eroded.
A surface
warm front has continued to lift northward across parts of central
into northern AL, with a moderately to strongly unstable airmass
present to its south across parts of southern/central MS into AL.
The greatest near-term tornado potential appears to be with a
supercell currently in Noxubee County MS, and continuing downstream
into west-central AL. Low-level flow is backed to southeasterly
along the warm front across this area, with latest mesoanalysis
estimating effective SRH now exceeds 500 m2/s2. A strong tornado may
occur with this supercell given the very strong low-level shear in

the presence of a supercell. Otherwise, all severe hazards remain
possible for the next couple of hours along and downstream of
ongoing convection across southern/central MS. Another strong
tornado also appears possible with a supercell moving from Pike into
Walthall County in southern MS.
 
So....if I live on a mountain, outside Dunlap, TN, in a manufactured home...I don't need to worry as much? I'm just learning how to interpret all the data...so...I ask those that know...thanks in advance.
If you live in a manufactured home, no matter what kind of terrain it's on, you need to abandon it and seek safe shelter if you are in a tornado warning polygon.
 
So....if I live on a mountain, outside Dunlap, TN, in a manufactured home...I don't need to worry as much? I'm just learning how to interpret all the data...so...I ask those that know...thanks in advance.

I would say things look better for you than they did 12 hours ago but far, far, far from out of the woods and you should continue to monitor.
 
Nasty BWER on the storm in Southern MS.
 
Really concerned about those warm sector supercells. That environment is absolutely disturbing all the way across two states in their path.
 
Back
Top