Biggest Slight Risk outbreaks

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Apr 10, 2008
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Location
Enid, Oklahoma
Well I was just curious to know of the top of your head, are there any slight risk days that really caught your attention, such as a outbreak... I have been a little bored lately and was looking at the Severe Weather Index and noticed some slight days have had more tornadoes than Moderate risk days. This will hopefully encourage my attention when a slight risk is issued for here in N. OK.

Thanks for your time,
Brendon Lindsey
 
I know the May 3, 1999 outbreak was a slight risk all the way up to the Day 1 outlooks. I don't remember if they upgraded on the first day 1 outlook or if they waited until the second one. It made it to high risk by that afternoon though.
I don't remember any major outbreaks on slight risk days. The Attica/Harper county storms was on a slight risk day. That storm produced an F3 and and F4 in addition to 9 other tornadoes (according to the survey). As far as I know that's pretty damn unusual to get a violent tornado on a slight risk day.
 
As previously mentioned, 3 May 99 is the first outbreak that comes to my mind. The models had major issues with the mid to upper level features right up until the day of the event. Just goes to show the importance of looking at real-time data on chase day, prior to picking a chase target or deciding to go out at all.
 
I can definitely vouch for 7/7/2004.

The Russell supercell was definitely one of the best structures I have ever seen. The supercell dropped tube after tube on its very slow east-southeast trek. I would suppose the SPC never issued a tornado watch due to the very localized tornadic threat as the Russell storm was the only major tornado producer. I was still very new to storm chasing during this chase as I watched the storm from a gas station along I-70 east of Russell, I have attached some pictures from my chase that day. Sorry they aren't the best of pictures but my photography skills have improved since then.
 

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As previously mentioned, 3 May 99 is the first outbreak that comes to my mind. The models had major issues with the mid to upper level features right up until the day of the event. Just goes to show the importance of looking at real-time data on chase day, prior to picking a chase target or deciding to go out at all.

Words to live by there Kenny. Spend way more time looking at what is going on real time that what computer models are telling you the day of the chase.
 
8/18/05 - S. WI tornado outbreak. Slight risk at least until event unfolded. Downplayed event severely due to morning convection that crossed area. Highest tornado risk of 5% was actually over N IL for a bit.
 
May 12, 2004: South Central KS Tornadoes, but one should not judge a chase day on SPC outlooks; outlooks are for NWS offices not chasers. I actually get a little annoyed when people countinually refer to the SPC outlook regarding a previous chase day or potential chase day, and I imagine some of the people at the SPC feel the same way, because they are forecasting for the public, not storm chasers.

tornado1.jpg
 
May 12, 2004: South Central KS Tornadoes, but one should not judge a chase day on SPC outlooks; outlooks are for NWS offices not chasers. I actually get a little annoyed when people countinually refer to the SPC outlook regarding a previous chase day or potential chase day, and I imagine some of the people at the SPC feel the same way, because they are forecasting for the public, not storm chasers.

tornado1.jpg


Simon beat me to the punch on this one....surprised I made it to page 2 before seeing this date mentioned.
 
Cold core events can really go bonkers when the stars line up right. 06/06/99 was like a cold core set-up on steroids in northeastern ND, with ~20 NNW-moving tornadoes including a couple F2s and an F4. 05/17/00 (Brady day) had numerous (non-supercellular?) tornadoes near the mid-level low center over northeast CO... some causing damage. Not atypically, both events had MDT risks farther to the east in association with stronger potential instability and stronger low-level/deep layer shear profiles. Cold core set-ups can obviously be pretty fickle, and highly dependent on mesoscale details... seems rather subjective what size of tornado probabilities each case warrants.
 
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