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classic nam12z 3k nam looks insane for southern michigan tomorrow holy crap
Think storm mode will be the limiting factor on that today. We'll see if anything remains discrete but I think a cluster mode is more on the table for today.Still only a 5% tornado risk when the RAP, NAM, and GFS have been showing these parameters since Friday. These soundings are all near the Kansas/Oklahoma border. When every single important variable is showing tornado, it doesn't really seem like a boom or Forecasted Convective Amplification Deficiency situation. A few of these parameters could fail to pan out and the storms would still have strong tornado potential. Can anyone with access post what the RRFS is showing? I'd also love to hear an analysis from @andyhb, @JPWX, and/or @jiharris0220. I'm completely prepared to eat crow on this one, but it's rare to see this much consistency across all the models for so long, and the SPC still not agreeing with them. What is causing this system to immediately turn into a QLCS with tornado potential, when such a high percentage of other systems with these parameters don't pan out that way.
Here's some RAP soundings
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Here's the NAM
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And here's the GFS
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Honestly, it looked like Dodge City, 2016 and Coleridge, 2014 combined.
That definitely seems to be the big failure mode, but I'm just wondering why it's expected to pan out that way without some intense, discrete, and prolific supercells along the way, given the parameters in place. Is it just because that's what the models are showing, or is there some other variable I'm missing that screams "immediate MCS"? I'm mainly just curious what meteorologists are seeing that tells them it'll be a large MCS with limited supercell activity, compared to other, similar set ups that are more isolated. Is it because there's so much moisture, and dew points are practically the same as temps? That would make sense I suppose.Think storm mode will be the limiting factor on that today. We'll see if anything remains discrete but I think a cluster mode is more on the table for today.
Forecast soundings show substantial low-level shear, steep lapse rates, and sufficient winds aloft for supercells capable of very large hail and a few tornadoes. Relatively warm temperatures in the 850-700mb layer are a negative factor for a greater tornado concern.
Today looking like a go big or go home day?Clouds have been cleared in the new problem area for about 2 hours now, which should increase surface heating quite a lot. Hopefully the SPC gets an observed sounding in the area in the next few hours.
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