Jim Bishop
EF4
Saturday still looks big. Yesterday I think I looked too much into one single model run. Based on the latest GFS & WRF models, convection should fire along the dryline over much of Western Kansas, and the cold front will likely be the initiator in Nebraska. Both should result in supercells with tornadoes. I mean, 35+ knots at 850mb from the south-southeast over a large region. And on top of that 3000 j/kg CAPE or more. Get ready for the first big Saturday chase in May.
What I find interesting is how the WRF breaks the cap all along the dryline down to West Texas. If that verified there would supercells from the SD/NE broder to near Mexico! Looking at the GFS, not only does it show the CAP breaking by 00z from the NE/SD border to near Mexico, but it actually shows convection firing in all those regions!
I'm not going to speculate on this being a big tornado outbreak or not, but it certainly looks like a big supercell outbreak. And if you think the tornado potential looks good...well then, this looks like a big event.
What I find interesting is how the WRF breaks the cap all along the dryline down to West Texas. If that verified there would supercells from the SD/NE broder to near Mexico! Looking at the GFS, not only does it show the CAP breaking by 00z from the NE/SD border to near Mexico, but it actually shows convection firing in all those regions!
I'm not going to speculate on this being a big tornado outbreak or not, but it certainly looks like a big supercell outbreak. And if you think the tornado potential looks good...well then, this looks like a big event.