Skip Talbot
EF5
I agree with playing the triple point/just east of the surface low. I'd go so far to say that its prefrontal initiation or bust (at least in terms of having a decent shot at a tornado). Surface winds right on the cold front are going to be badly veered, and the forcing from the cold front should kick up a rather solid, linear line after a brief window of initial supercells. If we can get something out ahead of that line, however, I think its game on for tornadoes. Helicity across the warm sector is amazing and coupled with the strong instability, 1km EHI values are very impressive and more than support a strong tornado threat:
http://www.twisterdata.com/data/mod...4/18/18/NAM_221_2011041818_F30_EHI_1000_M.png
The NAM has been consistently showing this environment. What's much less certain is whether we'll see prefrontal initiation. The last few runs have had a stout cap out along the warm front, but a decent hole by the triple point/surface low, which still made the setup look promising. I have noticed a trend toward weakening that cap as the event approaches, however, and given the NAM's tendency to overdo the cap this year I can buy that trend. In fact, the 18z run erodes the CINH all the way to the Indiana border by 0z:
http://www.twisterdata.com/data/mod.../18/18/NAM_221_2011041818_F30_CIN_SURFACE.png
Lift is going to come from a variety of sources. Models have consistently shown an MCS lifting out of the area that morning which should put down some nice outflow boundaries. The nose of this impressive low level jet could kicking something off in eastern IL/western IN:
http://www.twisterdata.com/data/mod.../18/18/NAM_221_2011041818_F30_WSPD_850_MB.png
The shortwave over the IL warm front would help further west:
http://www.twisterdata.com/data/mod.../18/18/NAM_221_2011041818_F30_WSPD_500_MB.png
As well as convergence near the triple point/surface low center hanging out by St. Louis.
I'd love to see that warm front push a little further north into better terrain and where the MS river is further west, but right now I'm eying the IL I-70 corridor for discrete tornadic supercells ahead of the cold front... or at least I'd rather bust there than chasing linear junk through the jungles of Missouri.
http://www.twisterdata.com/data/mod...4/18/18/NAM_221_2011041818_F30_EHI_1000_M.png
The NAM has been consistently showing this environment. What's much less certain is whether we'll see prefrontal initiation. The last few runs have had a stout cap out along the warm front, but a decent hole by the triple point/surface low, which still made the setup look promising. I have noticed a trend toward weakening that cap as the event approaches, however, and given the NAM's tendency to overdo the cap this year I can buy that trend. In fact, the 18z run erodes the CINH all the way to the Indiana border by 0z:
http://www.twisterdata.com/data/mod.../18/18/NAM_221_2011041818_F30_CIN_SURFACE.png
Lift is going to come from a variety of sources. Models have consistently shown an MCS lifting out of the area that morning which should put down some nice outflow boundaries. The nose of this impressive low level jet could kicking something off in eastern IL/western IN:
http://www.twisterdata.com/data/mod.../18/18/NAM_221_2011041818_F30_WSPD_850_MB.png
The shortwave over the IL warm front would help further west:
http://www.twisterdata.com/data/mod.../18/18/NAM_221_2011041818_F30_WSPD_500_MB.png
As well as convergence near the triple point/surface low center hanging out by St. Louis.
I'd love to see that warm front push a little further north into better terrain and where the MS river is further west, but right now I'm eying the IL I-70 corridor for discrete tornadic supercells ahead of the cold front... or at least I'd rather bust there than chasing linear junk through the jungles of Missouri.