tornado examiner
Member
- Messages
- 2,226
- Location
- texas
That early convection on the dry line is interesting.
That happens more than most people realize. So many areas that were hit on 4/3/74 were hit again on 4/27/11. Every county has its "tornado paths" that have been hit over and over through the years.
I just explained this to my students. I teach in Limestone County, AL and Tanner is the only city in country that has been hit by 3 EF-5 tornadoes. None of my students knew that factoid. Nature of patterns in science.
See: Anderson Hills in Harvest, AL
change "money maker" to knucle head lol... that was the censor system here because I said the three-letter a-word lol..... but yesMay I share this post across my social media feeds?
That's probably one of the worst HRRR runs I've ever seen.
BMX morning AFD.Source?
.SHORT TERM...
(Today through Saturday)
Issued at 234 AM CDT FRI MAR 14 2025
BLUF: A multi-faceted, and multi-day severe weather event should get
underway early tomorrow morning. Through Sunday morning, all modes
of severe weather will be possible, including strong and long-lived
tornadoes.
Things will get under very early Saturday morning (before 7AM), as
low pressure number one moves over the Great Lakes. Given the
location of the low, the upper-level dynamics won`t be all that
impressive. Even with that being the case, these early supercells
will still be possible of producing hail, damaging winds, and
tornadoes. These storms will quickly get bogged down in upscale
growth, with widespread morning convection moving north across the
region. This morning convection will play a key role in the scope of
the afternoon convection, as it will ultimately dictate how large
the warm sector is. There is still a decent spread in the high-res
guidance regarding the scope of these morning thunderstorms, with
most locations remaining clear, to most locations being completely
socked in. More scattered thunderstorms will ultimately lead to
quicker recovery, allowing those afternoon storms to have a better
environment to work with.
Even if the warm sector is slightly suppressed, the afternoon Theta-
e surge from the Gulf should allow for at least moderate instability
during the peak heating hours of the afternoon. This warm sector
will perfectly align with the deep 500mb trough ejection, and potent
surface low pressure moving into the Midwest. All of these
ingredients will combine for a highly volatile environment Saturday
afternoon, capable of producing all modes of severe weather. This
includes strong tornadoes, a few of which may be long-lived.
The threat for supercell tornadoes will continue into the evening,
before the cold front begins to crash, forcing everything to go
linear. Here, the threat for tornadoes embedded in the line will
remain, with the threat for damaging winds remaining as well. This
line will continue to trek east, before exiting the region sometime
before sunrise on Sunday.
I would like to end my discussion by saying this. We`ve already been
fielding calls asking about the possibility of getting upgraded to a
High Risk on Saturday. While the jury is still out on that, the
severe weather threat in general is all but certain. We`re
absolutely going to see some kind of impactful weather, it`s just a
matter of how widespread it will be. So, regardless of if the map
ends up red or pink, now is the time to prepare for a significant
severe weather event that is expected to linger into Sunday
morning.
I would like you all to notice too that only 3 in that list occurred in March.Of the CIPS Top 15 Analogs for tomorrow as of 0z, here's the date, the number of tornadoes, and the highest rated tornado:
1. March 5, 2004 - 29 tornadoes, 2 F2's
2. January 27, 1994 - 4 tornadoes, 1 F2
3. April 8, 1998 - 62 tornadoes (multiple days), 1 F5 on April 8
4. March 30, 2022 - 90 tornadoes (multiple days), 3 EF3's
5. February 27, 2000 - 0 tornadoes (???)
6. April 27, 2011 - 367 tornadoes (multiple days), 4 EF5's
7. February 23, 2019 - 7 tornadoes (multiple days), 1 EF3
8. April 4, 1981 - 5 tornadoes, 1 F4
9. January 30, 2013 - 66 tornadoes (multiple days), 1 EF3
10. February 2, 2016 - 14 tornadoes (multiple days), 3 EF2's
11. April 7, 2010 - 8 tornadoes (multiple days), 2 EF 1's
12. March 31, 2016 - 29 tornadoes (multiple days), 3 EF2's
13. February 15, 1990 - 12 tornadoes, 1 F2+ * (couldn't find info on this tornado, other than it being significant)
14. April 16, 1998 - 63 tornadoes (multiple days), 1 F5
15. February 21, 1997 - 11 tornadoes, 1 F2
So collectively these 15 events represent 6 F5/EF5 tornadoes, with a median of 14 tornadoes (if we ignore the entry with 0 tornadoes, this goes up to 29 tornadoes). The median highest intensity, weighted by frequency, of these top 15 analogs is F2/EF2. But there's extremely wide variation. Among the Top half of the analogs (Top 8), 7/8 have at least 1 tornado, 5 of the 8 have F3/EF3 or higher tornadoes occurring, and 3 of the 8 have F4/EF4+ occurrences.
Just some food for thought.
its the Birmingham AFDSource?
lots of cool season events in there interestingly enough, wonder why that is?I would like you all to notice too that only 3 in that list occurred in March.
lots of cool season events in there interestingly enough, wonder why that is?
Yep and that's never a good sign in the spring months.It’s probably latching on helicity/deep layer shear.