THE HUMIDITY. It's 89, but feels like 102. It's insane how humid it is. #wfaaweather pic.twitter.com/ZxDUf8Rrw1
— Pete Delkus (@wfaaweather) June 14, 2023
Might have been premature on this.FTAG 2000 said:
Another round of severe storms is possible today!
— NWS Fort Worth (@NWSFortWorth) June 15, 2023
Isolated to scattered storms will develop along an near a boundary late afternoon/early evening with most storms becoming quickly severe. Stay alert & make sure to have multiple ways to receive warnings. #dfwwx #ctxwx #txwx pic.twitter.com/QtpwOciGGQ
Storms should start popping in the next 1-2 hours. Any that do will go severe quickly.mAgnoliAg said:
Where is this coming from?
91AggieLawyer said:
Nothing on the radar in Texas right now except a small shower west of Killeen. The development in OK is going due east.
Is it too hot for that dry line to form? Temps in West Texas, particularly the panhandle, are only a few degrees cooler than they are in DFW.
If the dry line doesn't form will the storms still be triggered?
It appears that a southern stream perturbation is crossing Texas. May be contributing to early convective initiation across southwestern Oklahoma and even attempts down in Texas Hill Country. #okwx #txwx pic.twitter.com/YK9HvYDV8g
— Quincy Vagell (@stormchaserQ) June 15, 2023
18z surface analysis #kswx #okwx #txwx pic.twitter.com/hFcP2xtKUY
— Quincy Vagell (@stormchaserQ) June 15, 2023
seems like several cells have tried to form due west and have died due to the cap holdingFTAG 2000 said:
There's a cell trying to go up by Eliasville and South Bend. If that goes, it will be trouble for the north side of the Metroplex.
2wealfth Man said:seems like several cells have tried to form due west and have died due to the cap holdingFTAG 2000 said:
There's a cell trying to go up by Eliasville and South Bend. If that goes, it will be trouble for the north side of the Metroplex.
FTAG 2000 said:
There's a cell trying to go up by Eliasville and South Bend. If that goes, it will be trouble for the north side of the Metroplex.
As an aside, that tornadic cell in outside of Lawton OK is a monster.
?agcrock2005 said:
Well they got the location way wrong on this one...again.
Quote:
Mesoscale Discussion 1087
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0654 PM CDT Thu Jun 15 2023
Areas affected...Portions of southern OK into north-central TX
Concerning...Tornado Watch 307...309...
Valid 152354Z - 160130Z
The severe weather threat for Tornado Watch 307, 309 continues.
SUMMARY...The threat for large hail, severe/damaging winds, and
tornadoes will continue this evening.
DISCUSSION...The supercell thunderstorm complex in southern OK may
be trying to grow into a small bowing cluster based on recent radar
trends. The environment downstream remains quite favorable
along/south of an effective warm front that extends from
western/southern OK into north-central and northeast TX. Large hail
will remain possible with these intense thunderstorms in the short
term, and severe/damaging winds may become an increasing concern if
a more linear mode becomes dominant. If this mode transition occurs,
then significant severe wind gusts (75+ mph) would become more
likely given the very large reservoir of buoyancy available. Backed
low-level flow near the surface front is promoting a narrow corridor
of 200-300 m2/s2 of effective SRH per latest mesoanalysis estimates.
Given the favorable low-level shear, tornadoes will remain possible
with embedded circulations. A local extension in area for Tornado
Watch 309 may be needed for part of north-central into northeast TX
if convection continues to track southeastward.
Was going off earlier predictions that it would be here (I'm in Northlake/Argyle area) much earlier than now, and everything has been much further north than us. We have nothing so far. Delkus just tweeted this about 20 minutes ago. Seems this week has so much uncertainty that nobody knows what's going on though!wangus12 said:?agcrock2005 said:
Well they got the location way wrong on this one...again.
Right now, everything is north! https://t.co/SRnLnJilBz
— Pete Delkus (@wfaaweather) June 16, 2023