Paul Hadfield
EF3
Unless there is a term to describe what we saw yesterday in IL, i'm officially dubbing the phenomena which occurred as "rickrollers". What I mean is that during the passage of the actual cold front, there was a low top moisture starved broken squall line having incredible motion. I was out with my daughter and witnessed this phenomena which is not at all uncommon but has a tendency to get folks excited. It's as though the updrafts despite rapid rolling movement have a hard time going vertical so to wrap up into bonafide mesocyclones. Some do of course manage to go vertical and produce as was the case with the fortunate one we saw but the tendency is to be small and harmless. Adding to the mix is the presence of small needle-like shear funnels along the updrafts base and you can bet the calls start pouring in as what had happened. I even called ILX not as a public service but rather to tell them to step outside since I was just a few miles away from the office and wondered if they saw what was going on. Saw on Adam Lucio's FB status/Danny Neal's blog that SPC issued a MD for this event and on Tom Skilling's blog a wall cloud extending more than 35% to the ground was reported as having produced brief touchdown in Belvidere. Either way, it's always fun for a weather weenie like me but since this spinny phenomena doesn't fall into the category of what is true, what is it called? If I had to sum up yesterday i'd say we were "rickrolled" lol.
Time lapse video of what i'm talking about and no this isn't an April Fools joke
Time lapse video of what i'm talking about and no this isn't an April Fools joke

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