W
WeatherLC
Guest
Pouring rain in GainesvilleSeeing some light in the clouds up here. Looks like where it isn't raining, there may be some gaps in the low clouds.
Pouring rain in GainesvilleSeeing some light in the clouds up here. Looks like where it isn't raining, there may be some gaps in the low clouds.
I am really disappointed that the HRRR has gone full potato right before this event.Latest HRRR looks to be trying to get a clue about what things are doing at initialization.![]()
Who said it was going to bust....I just pointed out am observation. The only thing foolish is your interpretation of my comment.
I am really disappointed that the HRRR has gone full potato right before this event.
Yeah, all we have is the NAM, RAP (not that good), and the WRF models.Yep no way in hell anyone can trust the hrrr until it catches back up![]()
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
It's pretty clear the energy transport north is unabated with a sharp cutoff at the warm front. It will be interesting to see how much farther it nudges northeast. I'd also think the areas along the warm front will have a significant boundary to operate on.Sorry, I should have toned my response down.
Given the magnitude of parameters most guidance has been spitting out I personally don't think it's wise to back off it yet so early..that's my point
Ohh greatAtlanta TOR:CON is upgraded to 8.
Per NWS BMX, storm relative helicities of 108 m2/s2 and 0-6km bulk shear at 54 knots per latest derived hodograph. That SRH is less than impressive, though as they pointed out still supportive of TORs, but may limit the tornado threat WEST of I65.
I am very interested to see where cell genesis occurs ahead of the approaching cold front. As Storm5 pointed out, CAPE is plentiful. SRH is lagging to the west and should explode westward as the low ejects ENE. The question for AL will be timing as the best SRH and CAPE values may be a bit disjointed.
Yep you can see on the meso page that the winds in central and western Al aren't backed and have a bit of a westerly component to them the more west you go which may limit the tornado threat and significant tornado threat there. I personally think the best corridor is MGM to MCN to CAEPer NWS BMX, storm relative helicities of 108 m2/s2 and 0-6km bulk shear at 54 knots per latest derived hodograph. That SRH is less than impressive, though as they pointed out still supportive of TORs, but may limit the tornado threat WEST of I65.
I am very interested to see where cell genesis occurs ahead of the approaching cold front. As Storm5 pointed out, CAPE is plentiful. SRH is lagging to the west and should explode westward as the low ejects ENE. The question for AL will be timing as the best SRH and CAPE values may be a bit disjointed.
If there is 3-4 hours of heating, storm initialization is going to be stupid fast as CAPE will be skyrocketing.Sun is out in Hoover now.