- Thread starter
- #481
KevinH
Member
Oh HELL!!!!!!
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Oh HELL!!!!!!
Ok I’m sorry, but you say this any time anyone brings up any type of potential limiting factors. Thats part of forecasting. Regurgitating the same line about Dixie being some magical land where the rules don’t apply, is not forecasting, nor does it contribute anything of value to the discussion.You haven’t “met” Dixie Alley have you? lol
Can I assume this is the low level jet working?Vis showing some clearing in central Miss. View attachment 24688
Low level jet doesn't really kick in til later.Can I assume this is the low level jet working?
...OH Valley...
Water-vapor imagery loop overnight showed a southern-stream
short-wave trough associated with this morning's severe thunderstorm
activity straddling the OH River in central KY and southern IN.
This early-day thunderstorm complex will probably pose a risk for
wind damage and perhaps a couple of tornadoes before it moves into
the central Appalachians towards midday (see MCD #341 for short-term
details). In its wake, a trailing outflow boundary/effective warm
frontal zone will likely advance northward into IN/OH later today
with lower to mid 60s progged to near I-70. Models continue to show
an appreciable window of opportunity in which cloud breaks/heating
and increasing low-level moisture contribute to moderate
destabilization during the afternoon. Have adjusted the western
envelope of severe probabilities farther west across IN to account
for greater destabilization than earlier forecast, but otherwise
have left the outlook unchanged across the OH Valley. Scattered
thunderstorms will likely develop by early to mid afternoon with
discrete supercells evolving from the more intense updrafts.
Tornadoes, large to very large hail, and damaging gusts are expected
with the supercells that mature across the warm sector. Enlarged
and elongated hodographs imply fast storm motions and the
possibility for several cyclic tornadic supercells, some of which
may yield strong and long-lived tornadoes.
Vis showing some clearing in central Miss. View attachment 24688
I completely agree with you Justin.I’m gonna say it again; I just don’t see Ohio getting a moderate risk verified. Kentucky and north Tennessee is the hot spot imo
It's definitely possible, but not a given (it is a risk after all I suppose). Will depend on what happens with that clearing on satellite + dews.I’m gonna say it again; I just don’t see Ohio getting a moderate risk verified. Kentucky and north Tennessee is the hot spot imo