Severe Weather outbreaks

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Tornadoes scare the hell out of me just the way the sky goes dark. It's like the tornado sucks the light from the sky. I couldn't imagine experiencing a tornado at night.

I feel like the weather fan community (especially hurricanes and tornadoes) are like the train community. Some are cool but with the Internet it has made it extremely autistic and spergy to the point it's kinda gay again. Wannabe weathermen soyfacing as an F5 tornado plows through a small town neighborhood and destroys people's livelihoods and potentially people's lives. Nature is cool and witnessing it's power can be exciting and very interesting but it should be respected, not gawked at like it's a circus.
 
is everything just faggy open mouth breathing screaming at nothing now? what happened to professionalism like james spann.
Honestly? Pretty much. WX nerds have become obnoxious and very alarmist, acting like if you're living in an area that the SPC has put under a 'SLIGHT' category, you might as well just try to twist yourself around backwards so you can kiss your ass goodbye, not to mention just generally all of the excessive bullshit in meteorology, too. Can't speak for anyone else but in my area it seems like every fucking rain cloud gets at least a 'Special Weather Statement', if not a severe warning.

As per usual with these systems it fell apart and collapsed before it got to my neck of the woods, which I'm thankful for as I've only just gotten my house below 86 fucking degrees after my A/C unit went out and I had to put in a new one. I've gone three days without power when the heat index was well into the hundreds, I don't think I need to do that twice, I wouldn't put it on my 'highlight reel' for life experiences. But yeah, the 'WX community' is basically a bunch of dumb ass kids either praying for an EF-5 to flatten a major metro or other dumb ass kids berating anyone who gets excited about tornadoes, even if they aren't killing anyone or damaging property, because it theoretically COULD have done so.
 
Maybe if you're a retard who ignores warnings, or tries to go stormchasing without experience or training just for an adrenaline fix.
Storm chasing tourism got a couple of vans full of paying idiots rolled over into a ditch by an F4 near me some years ago. The profit motivation caused them to try to cross the path of the tornado to get a good view from the north side. Even if they had succeeded it was rain wrapped. Those rocket surgeons got someone paralyzed.
 
Storm chasing tourism got a couple of vans full of paying idiots rolled over into a ditch by an F4 near me some years ago. The profit motivation caused them to try to cross the path of the tornado to get a good view from the north side. Even if they had succeeded it was rain wrapped. Those rocket surgeons got someone paralyzed.
Let me guess: they didn't have any commercial insurance, and their insurance company dropped their asses as soon as they heard that they were charging money for the ride.
 
Let me guess: they didn't have any commercial insurance, and their insurance company dropped their asses as soon as they heard that they were charging money for the ride.
They advertised themselves as a storm tourism outfit and I would hope they had insurance for that. Sadly I don't have any info on if they got sued into oblivion or became uninsurable.
 
Pretty interesting footage. Curious that an above ground pool and multiple sheds remain standing while several buildings have collapsed walls and no roofs. Nature is strange.
Tornados often have the most bizarre damage paths. Three houses in a row can get flattened, then the next three spared and then three more after that all in a line.
 
Pretty interesting footage. Curious that an above ground pool and multiple sheds remain standing while several buildings have collapsed walls and no roofs. Nature is strange.
Tornadoes are strange. At least with other severe weather heading towards towards you, you know you're fucked. But a tornado? Either you will somehow survive perfectly fine or flat out die, no inbetween.
 
Pretty interesting footage. Curious that an above ground pool and multiple sheds remain standing while several buildings have collapsed walls and no roofs. Nature is strange.
That's usually an indicator of a multi-vortex tornado. They have several smaller sub-vortices embedded within the main circulation which can be much stronger and move around chaotically, it's why you'll often see seemingly random shit along the damage path.
 
The Peoria tornado from yesterday. Looks a lot similar to the Bridge Creek-Moore F5.
peoria tornado.png
Tornados often have the most bizarre damage paths. Three houses in a row can get flattened, then the next three spared and then three more after that all in a line.
Or they can loop a lot. Just look at Elie as an example.
Screenshot from 2026-06-12 19-13-20.png
 
Or they can loop a lot. Just look at Elie as an example.
Looping or otherwise weird movement in a tornado's path is scarier than unpredictable damage within the path caused by multiple vortices. Look at the El Reno tornado and the experienced storm chasers that got killed by it moving strangely.
 
Looping or otherwise weird movement in a tornado's path is scarier than unpredictable damage within the path caused by multiple vortices. Look at the El Reno tornado and the experienced storm chasers that got killed by it moving strangely.
That one had it all: massive size, chaotic subvortices with EF5 strength and very erratic movement. You know it's bad when even a lunatic like Reed Timmer goes ''nope, this is not a tornado we want to intercept''.
 
That one had it all: massive size, chaotic subvortices with EF5 strength and very erratic movement. You know it's bad when even a lunatic like Reed Timmer goes ''nope, this is not a tornado we want to intercept''.
I think it even had radar-estimated winds of 313mph at one point. Absolutely insane.
The Peoria tornado from yesterday. Looks a lot similar to the Bridge Creek-Moore F5.
NWS Chicago has given it a preliminary EF3 rating.
 
A big'un is barrelling towards the Tacos and Tequila Festival at Legends Stadium, a minor league baseball field on the Kansas side of KC.

Screenshot_20260613_195542_YouTube.jpg
 
Potentially major tornado outbreak appears likely tomorrow, mainly in parts of Illinois and Indiana.
1781626998372.png
The SPC has outlined a tornado-driven moderate risk of severe storms; a 15% chance of tornadoes up to EF3 (potentially higher) in intensity within a 25 mile radius of any given point (CIG 2), surrounded by a 10% chance and 5% chance of tornadoes up to EF2 in intensity (CIG 1). I personally believe this may be increased to a 30% chance of tornadoes up to EF4 in intensity (CIG 3), which would be above the criteria for a high risk.

NWS Chicago has their own Forecaster's Discussion, and the wording is particularly extreme, which to me, hints at a possible upgrade in the forecast down the line.
1781627294155.png
FXUS63 KLOT 160734
AFDLOT

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Chicago/Romeoville, IL
234 AM CDT Tue Jun 16 2026

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Period or two of scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms
expected today, with a level 1 of 5 severe risk east of I-55
including NW Indiana.

- A dangerous severe weather outbreak, including the potential
for long tracked, strong-violent tornadoes, is possible
Wednesday, especially south of I-80.

- Locally heavy rainfall Wednesday could result areas flash
flooding and potentially some river flooding.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 234 AM CDT Tue Jun 16 2026

Today:

Water vapor imagery early this morning depicts a vigorous
shortwave trough digging southeast into the mid-upper
Mississippi Valley with an embedded compact mid-upper level low.
At the sfc, low pressure near Duluth early this morning will
deepen as it moves southeast to near Green Bay by early this
afternoon. A trailing cold front will sweep across the area
later this morning through mid afternoon. While southerly winds
ahead of this front will draw some moisture northward, an
elongated east-west oriented ridge of high pressure to our south
will block the return of any meaningful Gulf moisture today.

A lead band of showers and isolated thunderstorms is expected to
blossom over northern IL toward sunrise as the increased ascent
associated with a lead impulse encounters the better (though
still somewhat meager by mid-June standards) moisture over the
area. This lead band of showers and isolated t-storms should
sweep quickly across the CWA between 11-16z. Despite the limited
moisture, steep lapse rate and cold mid-upper level temps will
likely allow for a narrow axis of up to around 1000 J/kg of
MLCAPE to develop in the wake of the lead band of showers and in
advance of approaching cold front.

Scattered thunderstorms are expected to begin to develop along
and ahead of this front early-mid afternoon, with the big
question for our area being how far east the front gets before
storms develop. Strong shear and moderate instability would
likely support a risk of supercells capable of large hail and
perhaps locally damaging winds. At this point, it appears the
best chance of storms along the cold front in our CWA will be
roughly near/east of I-55, especially across northwest Indiana
where frontal passage will be latest to occur.

Behind the front, look for gusty westerly winds, probably
peaking in the 30-35 mph range at times this afternoon before
quickly subsiding toward sunset.

Wednesday:

An unusually powerful shortwave trough is progged to race
east-southeastward into the upper Midwest and western Great
Lakes Wednesday into Wednesday evening. Model guidance is in
good agreement on the synoptic scale with 500 mb heights
progged to be 3-4 standard deviations below normal for mid June.
At the sfc, an associated low pressure that could threat all-
time monthly record for June is expected to develop across
Wisconsin and eventually move into lower Michigan.
Unsurprisingly, the kinematic fields with such an anomalously
strong system are also nearing the upper echelons of what we
see this time of year in the Midwest. All of this to say that
synoptically, the ingredients are coming together for a
potentially dangerous outbreak of severe thunderstorms and
potentially long-tracked, intense tornadoes.

On the mesoscale, there are naturally greater uncertainties
regarding precisely where (and to a lesser extent, if) the
overlap of exceptionally strong deep and low level shear and
moderately strong instability will take place. SPC's latest
SWODY2 highlights areas south of I-80 in our CWA with a rare
day 2 moderate risk (level 4 of 5) for Wednesday. The potential
ceiling for bad this severe weather event could get is quite
high, but it is also important to note there are obviously still
failure modes that could materialize on the mesoscale and
prevent the reasonable worst case scenario from unfolding.

The general expectation as it looks now is that a strong low
level jet (increasing to 60kt+ at 850 mb by 12z Wed) will result
in very strong low level theta-e advection and eventually the
development of strong to severe thunderstorms late tonight.
Initially development is expected over eastern IA, but as the
low level jet translates eastward into IL, it should support
this convection developing/moving into northern IL near/after
sunrise Wednesday morning. While this convection will be
elevated, strong effective shear and a reservoir of 1000-2000
J/kg of MUCAPE should allow for elevated supercells. The
greatest severe risk Wednesday morning looks to be over our
western and eventually southern CWA. In addition to the threat
large hail, strong shearing instability near a sharpening
frontal inversion would point to at least some threat for the
development of gravity wave associated convection. Should this
occur, a damaging wind threat could also develop, despite little
or no sfc based instability. In fact, there could even be
pockets of locally significant severe wind gusts (>75 mph) near
or just west/south of our CWA Wednesday morning. This
convection will probably evolve into an MCS as it tracks east
across northern IL and into northwest Indiana Wednesday morning.

The morning convection will likely augment the warm frontal
position and at least initially slow the northward progression
of the composite warm front/outflow boundary, delaying
destabilization north into our CWA. This seems to be the most
obvious potential failure mode: morning convection retarding
the northward surge of the warm front and subsequently the
stronger instability, keeping the extreme wind shear profiles
and strong synoptic forcing somewhat divorced from the more
favorable instability. While that is one potential obvious
failure mode, at this point, it seems unlikely to fully succeed
in completely disrupting the otherwise exceptionally favorable
synoptic set-up from resulting in a high end severe threat.
Though the precise location of the most likely area(s) to see a
high end event, could change some on the mesoscale as the event
nears.

The reason that this morning convection is unlikely to
completely stunt the northward surging warm front is the
extremely strong mass response expected as a result of the near
record deep low pressure system. With a far less intense low
last Thursday, an impressively large footprint of a cold pool
left behind from an MCS that lingered well into the afternoon
was able to be completely overcome in just a matter of a couple
of hours late in the day. Something similar seems plausible
again tomorrow afternoon where a dissipating outflow boundary
from early convection could separate an extremely volatile air
mass from a still sufficiently unstable air mass north of the
boundary could support severe thunderstorms with damaging winds
and isolated tornadoes.

There is variance in guidance with just how far north the
effective boundary will get, but somewhere generally in the
vicinity of I-80 is where a majority of the models show it
reaching its peak latitude in our CWA. To the south of this
boundary, the environment looks similar to what's often seen in
the cool season major tornado outbreak in the southeastern
United States. Forecast hodographs are literally off the chart,
with 0-1 environmental SRH >500 m^2/s^2. This sort of extreme
low level shear, coupled with low LCLs and resultant strong
0-3km CAPE, fast storm motion, and favorable downstream
environment is the classic type of set-up long tracked strong-
violent tornadoes.

It's important stress that while the synoptic set-up is classic
for a tornado outbreak, we are dealing with convection that
often alters the mesoscale environment in ways that cannot be
anticipated 12-24+ hours in advance. As noted above, there are
certainly scenarios where an alteration of the mesoscale
environment could dramatically reduce or shift the area of the
greatest tornado risk. For this reason, it is important to
monitor later forecasts closely. Finally, in addition to the
supercell tornado threat, a fast moving line of severe
thunderstorms/possible derecho may also accompany the front
producing widespread, potentially significant, wind damage as
well as line embedded tornadoes, some possibly strong.

Not to be overlooked, precipitable water values are progged to
get to near or just above 2", meaning that convection will
likely be extremely efficient rain producers. The stronger
convection could easily produce 2"+ of rain in just an hour or
so. Given the antecedent very moist ground and generally above
average streamflow, there is a threat of flash flooding
Wednesday. The greatest threat may be with the first round of
convection, since it will likely be a bit slower moving and
offer a better chance of some training cells than the second
round. When the area most at risk can be better refined, we will
need a flood watch for portions of the area for Wednesday as
well.

After Wednesday:

We should see a break in the active pattern for the rest of the
work week. There are indications that we could get into a more
active northwest flow type pattern heading into the weekend and
beyond.

- Izzi

&&

.AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z WEDNESDAY/...
Issued at 1230 AM CDT Tue Jun 16 2026

Forecast concerns include...

Chance of thunderstorms this morning and again this afternoon.
Gusty southwest winds this morning, then west/northwest this
afternoon.

Overall, current forecast is in good shape with only some timing
thunder tweaks this afternoon. A broken line of showers and
scattered thunderstorms is expected to move across the terminals
this morning. Current tempo mention has this potential handled
well, though duration at any one location may end up being 1-2
hours. A second line of scattered thunderstorms is expected to
develop either right over the Chicago terminals or just east of
the Chicago terminals during the early/mid afternoon hours.
Adjusted current prob thunder an hour later but duration during
this time may be 1-2 hours as well. A few lingering showers may
be possible across far northeast IL/southwest WI and over Lake
Michigan through early this evening.

Southwest winds around 10kt overnight will slowly increase
toward daybreak when gusts to 20kt will be possible. Winds/gusts
will continue to increase through the late morning and then turn
west/northwest this afternoon behind the cold front. Gusts into
the upper 20kt range are expected. Speeds and gusts will
diminish quickly with sunset this evening.

Some mvfr level cigs are possible this morning and again this
afternoon, but will most likely be associated with precipitation
and not expecting prevailing mvfr cigs. cms

&&

.LOT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
IL...None.
IN...None.
LM...Small Craft Advisory from 9 AM this morning to 9 PM CDT this
evening for the IL and IN nearshore waters.

&&

$$

Visit us at weather.gov/chicago

The underlying parameters are quite ridiculous, and as the AFD mentioned, some of them are off the charts.
1781627503471.png
This forecasted weather sounding taken in east-central Illinois shows ridiculous storm-relative helicity, values over 500 m2/s2 from 0-1km and values nearing 1,000 m2/s2 in the effective inflow layer, absurdly unusual for this time of year. Values of 100-200 m2/s2 are sufficient for thunderstorm development and even significant tornadoes if paired with sufficient instability; this amount of shear is astounding. It just so happens to also be paired with very potent instability, with both surface and mixed-layer CAPE values exceeding 2,000 J/kg; well above what is needed to create significant tornadoes. Pairing these two alongside sufficient lapse rates around 6-6.5 C/km and extreme low-level instability, indicated by a 3CAPE of 150 J/kg, will likely cause any semi-discrete storm in this environment to produce and sustain a long-tracked, violent tornado, and perhaps several of them.

The storm mode, which is usually the biggest uncertainty and obstacles when it comes to a tornado outbreak reaching its full potential, appears to be very favorable for discrete to semi-discrete supercells; ideal for maximizing the production of long-tracked, violent tornadoes in this kind of environment. Since this is all weather models and forecasts, it's entirely possible this scenario does not play out, but as time goes on, this scenario does appear increasingly likely to occur.

Will provide more updates when more information is available. The 1730z Day 2 outlook is coming out soon, so if any major changes occur with the forecast, I'll post it.
 
Say hello to Potential Tropical Cyclone One!
xgtwo_atl_2d0_w1366.png

It is currently over Texas and is projected to enter the Gulf of America to become a tropical storm. Then, it will make landfall somewhere between Texas and Louisiana.

PTC_1_CONE.png

Long live Potential Tropical Cyclone One/Tropical Storm Arthur!
 
Última edición:
I have never seen so many weather people dooming and panicking about tomorrow.
I am in the direct line of storms that can/will make EF3+ tornadoes, so if I don't post on Thursday you know what happened.

Genuinely fucking spooked.
 
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