Derek Weston
EF5
This mornings 4km WRF run makes a few interesting statements:
1) It breaks out no convection in IL up to 00z.
2) It shows a massive supercell-type blob in SW IN at 22z
3) It makes SE IA appear to be the prime area for potential tornadoes breaking out a broken line of storms in the 22-23z range.
4) Illinois is completely clear of overnight convection by 16z-17z.
Not that the 4km WRF is above and beyond any other model, but it does have a positive track record in regard to where initiation is likely to occur, along with timing.
These are time sensitive links:
http://www.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/mmb/mpyle/cent4km/conus/12/refd_1000m_f34.gif
http://www.emc.ncep.noaa.gov/mmb/mpyle/cent4km/conus/12/refd_1000m_f36.gif
That's very interesting... agree this model has done a good job in the past and I value it above what the NAM/GFS usually spit out for reflectivity/precip.
The sparse convection seems to indicate capping through out part of the day that I just didn't imagine. Seems like a strong forcing day considering our shear profiles, had imagined things would be going faster earlier.
In regards to Illinois... by the time storms sweep in that were fired off the CF in Missouri, we might be looking at a very linear bow echo sort of setup. (SPC thinks mode might be this) Wondering if we might not see more isolated convection pop initially in SE IA south through Missouri... while Illinois does have the most favorable shear in 0Z time frame it seems, we're going to need an active WF or OFB interaction to fire discrete activity... as what IA/Mizz brings might not be the desired mode. But this is just my personal conjecture...
(personally, liking the trend for SE IA)