Scott Lincoln
EF4
This setup is very conditional, and I hope that with all of the people traveling such far distances for this storm system that the conditions are met.
Moisture is the big one. Winds from the Gulf dont seem to become favorable for really good moisture return until just a few hours before dark. The 18z NAM in particular somehow magically brings the 70F dewpoint contour north from near the Gulf all the way to almost to Nebraska in 6 hours. I really feel that the moisture is overdone. Less moisture, less CAPE, and also a significanly lower chance that there will even be storm initiation to realize the shear present with the system.
Complicating matters, the system keeps slowing down from run to run, as has been a usual occurance this year. That makes the distance even farther for the moisture to travel.
Looking at the BUFKIT profiles for Chamblerain, SD, it is apparent that looking at just the 700mb temperatures for the cap strength is insufficient. The main part of the cap appears to be just below that. The whole environment at that location appears to be pretty warm, meaning that any CAPE that gets realized looks to be narrow.
We may have a really strong system forming with a decent dryline and triple point, but that doesn't mean anything if we cant get storms to form... and we for sure cant have a decent shot at long-track, strong tornadoes if any storms that form are elevated.
Not trying to depress everyone, but we just have to see better moisture return from the Gulf if this is to be the big outbreak its hyped up to be.
Moisture is the big one. Winds from the Gulf dont seem to become favorable for really good moisture return until just a few hours before dark. The 18z NAM in particular somehow magically brings the 70F dewpoint contour north from near the Gulf all the way to almost to Nebraska in 6 hours. I really feel that the moisture is overdone. Less moisture, less CAPE, and also a significanly lower chance that there will even be storm initiation to realize the shear present with the system.
Complicating matters, the system keeps slowing down from run to run, as has been a usual occurance this year. That makes the distance even farther for the moisture to travel.
Looking at the BUFKIT profiles for Chamblerain, SD, it is apparent that looking at just the 700mb temperatures for the cap strength is insufficient. The main part of the cap appears to be just below that. The whole environment at that location appears to be pretty warm, meaning that any CAPE that gets realized looks to be narrow.
We may have a really strong system forming with a decent dryline and triple point, but that doesn't mean anything if we cant get storms to form... and we for sure cant have a decent shot at long-track, strong tornadoes if any storms that form are elevated.
Not trying to depress everyone, but we just have to see better moisture return from the Gulf if this is to be the big outbreak its hyped up to be.