• After witnessing the continued decrease of involvement in the SpotterNetwork staff in serving SN members with troubleshooting issues recently, I have unilaterally decided to terminate the relationship between SpotterNetwork's support and Stormtrack. I have witnessed multiple users unable to receive support weeks after initiating help threads on the forum. I find this lack of response from SpotterNetwork officials disappointing and a failure to hold up their end of the agreement that was made years ago, before I took over management of this site. In my opinion, having Stormtrack users sit and wait for so long to receive help on SpotterNetwork issues on the Stormtrack forums reflects poorly not only on SpotterNetwork, but on Stormtrack and (by association) me as well. Since the issue has not been satisfactorily addressed, I no longer wish for the Stormtrack forum to be associated with SpotterNetwork.

    I apologize to those who continue to have issues with the service and continue to see their issues left unaddressed. Please understand that the connection between ST and SN was put in place long before I had any say over it. But now that I am the "captain of this ship," it is within my right (nay, duty) to make adjustments as I see necessary. Ending this relationship is such an adjustment.

    For those who continue to need help, I recommend navigating a web browswer to SpotterNetwork's About page, and seeking the individuals listed on that page for all further inquiries about SpotterNetwork.

    From this moment forward, the SpotterNetwork sub-forum has been hidden/deleted and there will be no assurance that any SpotterNetwork issues brought up in any of Stormtrack's other sub-forums will be addressed. Do not rely on Stormtrack for help with SpotterNetwork issues.

    Sincerely, Jeff D.

8/24/07 REPORTS: KS, MO, IL, IN, MI, TX

Joined
Oct 29, 2004
Messages
957
Location
Olathe Kansas
I started out the day, hoping other storms would interact with boundaries like the Brown/Atchison county tornado in NE KS, and was about 20 m north of Mound City when that storm died. So I raced back north, taking shortcuts around traffic and hoping the one heading into the North KC metro would (could see it was getting close to it) produce. I got on the storm east of KC somewhere and followed it forever. It had a nice shelf cloud on it, and as the storm weakened, the shelf cloud looked better and better.

I forgot my tripod and 10 mm lens at home, which I would have given anything for. I leaned my camera up against my car and tried to hold it at a 15-30 degree angle for anywhere up to 3-8 seconds at 800 ISO. Most didn't come out so well, but a few did. Twice yesterday, I happened to hit the shutter at the perfect time and got CG's, this one, almost halfway into it, any closer and everything would have been blown out (though I got excited and had a little camera shake). The other, in broad daylight as I was driving testing out the metering on the sky.
Not a bad night, the structure was great for such a crap storm.

ekc4web.jpg


ekc2web.jpg


Lightning on this one illuminated all of the details perfectly.

ekc1web.jpg
 
Dick, that is one of the more impressive shelf clouds I've seen on Stormtrack this year!

I had an easy chase today, never getting more than 15 miles from home, but interecepting a rather pretty, somewhat HP-ish severe storm near Bethalto, IL:

chase82407-4.jpg


Just as I started to videotape the storm, I was startled by a CG within about a half mile, right in front of me between my position and the lowered area, which I managed to get on video. Full report, with more pics and video here:

http://www.johnefarley.com/chase82407.htm
 
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