jiharris0220
Member
An overwhelming total of 3 tornadoes with 1 in the moderate risk.
A slam dunk forecast.
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An overwhelming total of 3 tornadoes with 1 in the moderate risk.
i know it’s easy to dunk on the SPC, but there’s no world that exists in which you don’t make the same forecast 10/10 times.An overwhelming total of 3 tornadoes with 1 in the moderate risk.
A slam dunk forecast.
I'm sure there will be several surveys done to confirm whether they were tornadoes or not. Similar to the ENH QLCS outbreak we had in IL a week or two ago.Has anyone considered that some of those damaging wind reports might have been unwarned brief tornadoes?
Given the limitations they had in making this forecast, I totally agree with this. I don’t think anyone in this forum would have expected this event to play out like this.i know it’s easy to dunk on the SPC, but there’s no world that exists in which you don’t make the same forecast 10/10 times.
the parameter space yesterday was ELITE, and you have to look at the ceiling for human impact, not the floor.
“people will stop paying attention to warnings.” that’s on them. it’s also a bad idea to play russian roulette, even though the vast majority of pulls have no round in the chamber. until they do.
it’s all about what could be, not what’s going to be.
Was 4/28/2025 a PDS watch? I didn’t think it was but could be misremembering.
Most likely a Combination of trough geometry, forcing and jet placement, capping, and dry air. Everytime there’s a bu$t and there’s a wildfire somewhere, that smoke theory gets shoehorned as the reason. I don’t buy it at all. Wildfire smoke has been present for many events, as you noted, 4/27 and 3/14. It seems like the 5/20/2019 bu$t really gave that “hypothesis” legs. I still haven’t seen any definitive literature that wildfire smoke plays any role in bu$ting weather events.I'm curious to see the post event analysis on this. I've also seen the theories that wildfire smoke or dry air could have contributed to the underperformance. If I recall correctly, 4/27/11 had some wildfire smoke involved as well? If so, just goes to show how fine the line between helping and hurting environmental parameters is in these type of events.
Hmm, 4500+ cape, 100+ 3km cape, SRH of 200, EBSH over 60knots, which leads to a VTP of 12 and a STP of 8, at 7am in the morning where a supercell is tracking east in west central TX.
I guess bro.
Most likely a Combination of trough geometry, forcing and jet placement, capping, and dry air. Everytime there’s a bu$t and there’s a wildfire somewhere, that smoke theory gets shoehorned as the reason. I don’t buy it at all. Wildfire smoke has been present for many events, as you noted, 4/27 and 3/14. It seems like the 5/20/2019 bu$t really gave that “hypothesis” legs. I still haven’t seen any definitive literature that wildfire smoke plays any role in bu$ting weather events.
This is really understating it. The entire jet was misplaced by like, a few hundred miles? Models were COMPLETELY wrong about it.jet placement
Exactly. For whatever reason that’s WxTwitter’s pet theory. I mean it makes sense why fires occur at the same time occasionally, dry air and low humidity getting advected west due to the winds/cyclone. There are stories about both Palm Sunday and 4/3/74 having a ton of dust in the skies, I can guarantee you there were wildfires most likely burning somewhere as those systems progressed eastYeah, I don't think the impact of wildfire smoke is well understood. I saw it hypothesized in at least one article that it had aided 4/27 by providing additional condensation nuclei for developing storms. Then after 5/20/19 it was thrown around as a potential limiting factor. It was heavily present throughout much of the epic "10 Days in May" of 2003 and certainly didn't seem to do anything to hinder those outbreaks, apart from creating visibility issues for chasers/spotters on certain days.