Really starting to take on that 'classic supercell' appearance as it approaches Alexandria. Hopefully it falls apart before reaching the city.
a little inflow is starting to creep back in there.Broad but strong meso approaching Alexandria. Fingers crossed nothing drops between here and the city.
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It’s got a huge bow echo now, definitely got at least 60 mph winds in therea little inflow is starting to creep back in there.
That's a fairly high supercell probability 70% bull's-eye over central Alabama with widespread 50%..This morning, a number of synoptic features stand out, but some uncertainties abound regarding convective evolution. SREF values continue to increase, and expect this trend to continue. HRRR depicts aggressive convection, including severe storms over a large swath of MS/AL, with an intense QLCS following behind. HRRR suggests that the convection in front could wipe out instability across the area, potentially stunting the QLCS. NAM disagrees. For Georgia folks, especially Atlanta, the degree of threat we will see will all depend on the trusty old CAD, and it's always a toss up whether it erodes or not. Synoptically, most models show a strong, U-shaped trough advancing through the Southeast into Sunday morning, bringing with it extremely strong helicity. Despite aforementioned uncertainties, the possibility for a significant severe weather event is clear, and anyone from Louisiana to the Carolinas should be watching this system closely.
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I notice this happens fairly often with winter setups. I'm not sure why, I guess because people just don't think about tornadoes in December, which is unwise if you live in the South.Growing more concerned not only about the parameters, but from the public's reaction. Just from what I've seen - at least in north Alabama - people seem to either not care or just flat out ignoring tomorrow's threat. I don't want to start a panic, but I'm starting to use stronger wording in my posts on FB. It's been a long time since we've had a tornado threat, and I'm worried about fatalities due to complacency.
Waiting for the wrf runs now.Disclaimer: 12Z isn't all the way in yet, but so far it's looking rather ominous from LA all the way into GA.
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It could be a GRX problem but I've noticed this is an issue at some radar sites more than others.Is it just a quirk of GR Level 3 on certain NEXRAD sites (such as KHDC this morning and, almost every time I use it, KDGX) or are an alarming number of NWS offices consistently forgetting to operate their radars in SAILS mode during severe weather events, so you only get a volume scan every 5-7 minutes instead of 2-3? The difference is an eternity in "tornado time."