Chip Redmond
EF4
I really wish I could chase this weekend but will just have to hope for a midweek setup in the Ohio Valley or another good weekend next week in the plains. Anywho...
As of right now I would pick a target area of Cedar Rapids. NAM is actually now plotting a near bullseye of 2500+ j/kg from 18z on. Strongest frontal forcing will still be farther west preventing anything from going immediately linear if it can get going early. Directional shear is definitely there and forecast hodographs support right turning supercells although more speed shear would help greatly. I would like to see some improvements in helicity as best values of 100+ are much farther west and slightly farther east. One thing that really has caught my eye is the MCS/MCV that is currently passing over Chicago. It passed just S/SE/E of my would be target area through the course of the evening. Winds in its wake and vicinity are relatively calm (hence the dense fog advisories) which may play an important part in the lack of mixing. A fairly prominant boundary may have been laid from a line extending from St. Joseph, MO NE to Chicago. This boundary will be most visible as day comes around and may play a very important part of initiation and the possibilities of storms to become tornadic despite the lack of variables from the synoptic setup. Just a few thoughts.
Chip
As of right now I would pick a target area of Cedar Rapids. NAM is actually now plotting a near bullseye of 2500+ j/kg from 18z on. Strongest frontal forcing will still be farther west preventing anything from going immediately linear if it can get going early. Directional shear is definitely there and forecast hodographs support right turning supercells although more speed shear would help greatly. I would like to see some improvements in helicity as best values of 100+ are much farther west and slightly farther east. One thing that really has caught my eye is the MCS/MCV that is currently passing over Chicago. It passed just S/SE/E of my would be target area through the course of the evening. Winds in its wake and vicinity are relatively calm (hence the dense fog advisories) which may play an important part in the lack of mixing. A fairly prominant boundary may have been laid from a line extending from St. Joseph, MO NE to Chicago. This boundary will be most visible as day comes around and may play a very important part of initiation and the possibilities of storms to become tornadic despite the lack of variables from the synoptic setup. Just a few thoughts.
Chip