Devin Pitts
EF2
So I started this day out with very muted expectations given the morning convection in place, but luckily central through northern IL managed to clear out somewhat allowing for some recovery time. I made my way up towards La Salle/Peru along I-39 to try to catch up to the ongoing storms at about 3pm and eventually caught up with a very low topped supercell that managed to produce at least one funnel through its many cycles. I followed this cell to the northeast where it eventually it organized into a more traditional supercell as it crossed the warm front just south of DeKalb that was draped across the area in a NW-SE orientation and managed to pick up some decent low level rotation, but ultimately fell apart once it left the warm front.
After this storm, I saw a group of cells to my south near Franks that appeared to be a left split/right split pair making their way towards the warm front. I got on the right split as it was passing Hinckley at about 5:10pm and watched it organize very quickly as it crossed the warm front with a very rapidly rotating wall cloud just northeast of Hinckley(apologies for the focus, camera somehow turned auto-focus somehow):
Thankfully the storm motion was quite slow, which combined with the amazing road network of Northern IL allowed me to get quite close to the wall cloud. Eventually a funnel descended and made it about 2/3rds the way to the ground.
Now initially, I did not consider this a tornado as I didn't see any obvious ground circulation and was much more focused on the funnel churning just overhead. After reviewing my dashcam video I noticed small suction vorticies dancing in the field 250 yards from my position directly under the funnel!
Thanks to this I was able to make a delayed tornado report to NWS LOT to get it confirmed as a tornado.
After this storm, I saw a group of cells to my south near Franks that appeared to be a left split/right split pair making their way towards the warm front. I got on the right split as it was passing Hinckley at about 5:10pm and watched it organize very quickly as it crossed the warm front with a very rapidly rotating wall cloud just northeast of Hinckley(apologies for the focus, camera somehow turned auto-focus somehow):
Thankfully the storm motion was quite slow, which combined with the amazing road network of Northern IL allowed me to get quite close to the wall cloud. Eventually a funnel descended and made it about 2/3rds the way to the ground.
Now initially, I did not consider this a tornado as I didn't see any obvious ground circulation and was much more focused on the funnel churning just overhead. After reviewing my dashcam video I noticed small suction vorticies dancing in the field 250 yards from my position directly under the funnel!
Thanks to this I was able to make a delayed tornado report to NWS LOT to get it confirmed as a tornado.