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Towering Cumulus?

Joined
Sep 2, 2008
Messages
86
Location
Newcastle, UK (the weather sucks here!)
I took these photos early in the morning, of what I assumed to be towering cumulus, are they?

104_0659.jpg


104_0660.jpg


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(that one shows that is it clear under the cloud)

104_0663.jpg


So are these towering cumulus? They look like sort of mini supercells to me with overshooting tops, remember this was in November, in the North East of England.
 
Towering cu and mini supercells are not the same thing... The pictures seem out of focus at least on my display, with a lot of raindrops on the windows, so it's hard to tell.
 
Looks like boring strato-cumulus to me...might produce a few sprinkles but that's about it. Typically you won't see towering cu until afternoon when strong surface heating has occurred.
 
Going to agree with Scott as well.
I'm trying to think of how to describe what TCu looks like, but I'm a bit brain dead at the moment. I know somebody around here has a cloud pic or two to show you what it looks like ;).
Think of a big (6-7km high) cloud, puffy, but not like regular Cu. This cloud looks like it's carved out of marble...it looks solid. You normally don't see TCu early in the day. They're more of an afternoon/evening cloud on a nice, warm, unstable spring day.
 
Here is a picture I shot on May 7th of this year from a storm in Falls Co. in Texas. This storm formed along the dryline that had pushed through that afternoon and later produced a confirmed tornado near Bremond,TX, but poor road options cut me off from getting to the storm. I was on the north side of this storm went it exploded and I got a pretty good shot.

05-07-08FallsCoSupercell010-1.jpg
 
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Ah good ol Tcu...a site i probably wont see for 3 more months.

Since I wasnt there I would guess your photos were of the dissipating state of a shower/thunderstorm. More likely leftover towers. Towering Cu would appear just like the photos above...and ill throw in one of mine i took out my bedroom window this year.
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I actually called these "fail-cu" because they would tower up, bounce off the cap and then die. They ended up producing some local downpours thats it.
 
Here is a picture I shot on May 7th of this year from a storm in Falls Co. in Texas. This storm formed along the dryline that had pushed through that afternoon and later produced a confirmed tornado near Bremond,TX, but poor road options cut me off from getting to the storm. I was on the north side of this storm went it exploded and I got a pretty good shot.

05-07-08FallsCoSupercell010-1.jpg
I'd be inclined to encode this as an L3.
 
I would be inclined to labels Sams pic as cumulus. The others are cumulonimbus. If there is any sign of glaciation then the congestus is cumulonimbus. The highest towers on the pic by Chris shows glaciation. Outstanding pics.
 
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