Elaine Spencer
EF3
I'm not a meteorologist or storm chaser so I might be missing something that is obvious to a lot of you, but I have to ask:
What the heck was the deal with the HRRR on Friday spewing out sig tor parameters of 25 or higher for N IL on Saturday? If I'm not mistaken the highest sig tors in the 2011 Super Outbreak were in the 16-17 range. What was the HRRR "seeing" that could possibly have prompted it to go that far off the charts? I know that later models did back off of those predictions, and I gathered from some of the online discussions I saw that HRRR does tend to overperform (or should I say, underperform), but I'm trying to grasp why it would ever go that far off the rails. If this is a known fault of that model has anyone tried to correct it?
What the heck was the deal with the HRRR on Friday spewing out sig tor parameters of 25 or higher for N IL on Saturday? If I'm not mistaken the highest sig tors in the 2011 Super Outbreak were in the 16-17 range. What was the HRRR "seeing" that could possibly have prompted it to go that far off the charts? I know that later models did back off of those predictions, and I gathered from some of the online discussions I saw that HRRR does tend to overperform (or should I say, underperform), but I'm trying to grasp why it would ever go that far off the rails. If this is a known fault of that model has anyone tried to correct it?