View attachment 53416
Holy hell, they went 45cig 1 even with uncertainty's they did the 45# insane def a upper-end day it seems
I honestly think they’re leaning in too much with the uncertainty regarding the morning convection.
Regardless of how much there is, it’s all isentrophic, (north of the warmfront) so it doesn’t really matter.
The orientation of this system is unusual, (it’s orientation is southeast to northwest), this allows for a unique scenario where convection north of the warm front can actually move south of it and become surface based. The MPAS shows this well.
The tornado threat is likely to come from three separate areas of convection
1. Isentrophic lift convection propagating into the warm sector and becoming surface based. (These storms will have the most ample amount of deep layer shear and low level shear available, but vertical instability is a bit limited, though definitely still sufficient)
2. Dryline convection. (These storms will have the lowest shear environment, but the highest vertical instability values available)
3. OWS convection. (Considering the lack of an inversion layer, and exceptional forcing, these seem likely, and will have the middle ground in terms of shear and instability)
Either way, an all hazards threat and an even more impressive set up than the one last Thursday.