James Gustina
Supporter
Marginal looking day in terms of any appreciable threat for supercellular/isolated storms but still worth looking at.
12Z NAM placed significant instability on the order of 2000 j/kg+ of MLCAPE over north-central Oklahoma along with pretty decent moisture with dewpoints around 60F. The biggest problem with this one is the NAM, GFS and SREF are all showing very weak upper-level support with NW flow at 30-40 knots and a poor kinematic environment with very little veering with height/lack of appreciable deep-layer shear with the SREF shooting under 30 kts. The dryline that the NAM was hinting at in western Oklahoma also looked diffuse along with a rapidly advancing cold front out of Kansas. Besides the poor shear though, everything else should be ok with a considerably unstable environment for this time of year along with the great moisture and forcing possibly coming in advance of the cold front. As opposed to the last few setups on the southern plains, the moisture is already in place a full day in advance making the possibility for rapid moisture transport the day of with heavy cloud cover pretty unlikely. I've heard some other people talk about this as well, but if there's ongoing convection overnight in Oklahoma and Texas, there's the possibility for an outflow boundary to hang around in northern Oklahoma and maybe put up something a bit more substantial than the multicell clusters that look likely otherwise. Thoughts?
12Z NAM placed significant instability on the order of 2000 j/kg+ of MLCAPE over north-central Oklahoma along with pretty decent moisture with dewpoints around 60F. The biggest problem with this one is the NAM, GFS and SREF are all showing very weak upper-level support with NW flow at 30-40 knots and a poor kinematic environment with very little veering with height/lack of appreciable deep-layer shear with the SREF shooting under 30 kts. The dryline that the NAM was hinting at in western Oklahoma also looked diffuse along with a rapidly advancing cold front out of Kansas. Besides the poor shear though, everything else should be ok with a considerably unstable environment for this time of year along with the great moisture and forcing possibly coming in advance of the cold front. As opposed to the last few setups on the southern plains, the moisture is already in place a full day in advance making the possibility for rapid moisture transport the day of with heavy cloud cover pretty unlikely. I've heard some other people talk about this as well, but if there's ongoing convection overnight in Oklahoma and Texas, there's the possibility for an outflow boundary to hang around in northern Oklahoma and maybe put up something a bit more substantial than the multicell clusters that look likely otherwise. Thoughts?