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2 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0250 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Valid 082000Z - 091200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF THE
MID-ATLANTIC...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected across the Mid-Atlantic
states. More isolated severe storms are expected across portions of
the Plains into the Mid Mississippi Valley.
...20Z Update...
Minor changes were made to the outlook based on current
observations. Otherwise, the previous forecast reasoning remains
valid.
..Wendt.. 07/08/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025/
...Mid-Atlantic this afternoon/evening...
Strong surface heating is underway within a very moist boundary
layer consisting of generally mid 70s dewpoints. Regional 12z
soundings, modified for afternoon temperatures and associated
vertical mixing, suggest the potential for MLCAPE near or above 2000
J/kg with minimal convective inhibition. Larger-scale forcing for
ascent will be modest with a slightly enhanced (~25 kt) belt of
west-southwesterly midlevel flow from the OH Valley to southern New
England, though the primary focus for scattered thunderstorm
development is expected to be a surface trough from the immediate
lee of the Blue Ridge into MA by mid afternoon. Though midlevel
lapse rates will not be particularly steep, steepening low-level
lapse rates with hot afternoon temperatures in the low-mid 90s will
drive strong downdraft potential (per DCAPE near 1000 J/kg) and the
resultant threat for wind damage with multicell clusters and/or
short line segments.
...Central High Plains to the Ozarks this afternoon/evening...
A weakening outflow boundary from overnight convection is moving
southeastward into southeast MO, and southward into OK, while a
remnant MCV moves eastward over northern MO. South of the outflow,
clouds and ongoing convection from eastern OK to the MO Bootheel
cast uncertainty on the degree of destabilization this afternoon in
advance of this portion of the outflow. Farther west, stronger
surface heating/destabilization is expected along and south of the
outflow into OK, but forcing for ascent is in question with gradual
height rises expected aloft. A weak lee trough could help focus at
least isolated thunderstorm development this afternoon/evening
across the central High Plains, where northwesterly flow
aloft/hodograph length could be sufficient for a high-based
supercell or two. However, a specific focus for initiation and the
potential for upscale growth are both uncertain given the background
height rises and little forcing for ascent. Thus, will maintain the
broad MRGL area for a low probability/conditional threat for severe
outflow winds and some hail.
...Northeast WI/Upper MI this afternoon/evening...
A midlevel shortwave trough and weak surface reflection will cross
northern WI and western Upper MI this afternoon, and a few storms
will be possible by mid afternoon from central Upper MI into extreme
northeast WI (in the wake of weak morning convection).
Thermodynamic recovery from weak morning convection and some
enhancement to westerly deep-layer shear suggests the potential for
semi-organized storms/clusters and a low-end threat for wind damage
and hail for a few hours later this afternoon/evening.
Read more
2 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0250 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Valid 082000Z - 091200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF THE
MID-ATLANTIC...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected across the Mid-Atlantic
states. More isolated severe storms are expected across portions of
the Plains into the Mid Mississippi Valley.
...20Z Update...
Minor changes were made to the outlook based on current
observations. Otherwise, the previous forecast reasoning remains
valid.
..Wendt.. 07/08/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025/
...Mid-Atlantic this afternoon/evening...
Strong surface heating is underway within a very moist boundary
layer consisting of generally mid 70s dewpoints. Regional 12z
soundings, modified for afternoon temperatures and associated
vertical mixing, suggest the potential for MLCAPE near or above 2000
J/kg with minimal convective inhibition. Larger-scale forcing for
ascent will be modest with a slightly enhanced (~25 kt) belt of
west-southwesterly midlevel flow from the OH Valley to southern New
England, though the primary focus for scattered thunderstorm
development is expected to be a surface trough from the immediate
lee of the Blue Ridge into MA by mid afternoon. Though midlevel
lapse rates will not be particularly steep, steepening low-level
lapse rates with hot afternoon temperatures in the low-mid 90s will
drive strong downdraft potential (per DCAPE near 1000 J/kg) and the
resultant threat for wind damage with multicell clusters and/or
short line segments.
...Central High Plains to the Ozarks this afternoon/evening...
A weakening outflow boundary from overnight convection is moving
southeastward into southeast MO, and southward into OK, while a
remnant MCV moves eastward over northern MO. South of the outflow,
clouds and ongoing convection from eastern OK to the MO Bootheel
cast uncertainty on the degree of destabilization this afternoon in
advance of this portion of the outflow. Farther west, stronger
surface heating/destabilization is expected along and south of the
outflow into OK, but forcing for ascent is in question with gradual
height rises expected aloft. A weak lee trough could help focus at
least isolated thunderstorm development this afternoon/evening
across the central High Plains, where northwesterly flow
aloft/hodograph length could be sufficient for a high-based
supercell or two. However, a specific focus for initiation and the
potential for upscale growth are both uncertain given the background
height rises and little forcing for ascent. Thus, will maintain the
broad MRGL area for a low probability/conditional threat for severe
outflow winds and some hail.
...Northeast WI/Upper MI this afternoon/evening...
A midlevel shortwave trough and weak surface reflection will cross
northern WI and western Upper MI this afternoon, and a few storms
will be possible by mid afternoon from central Upper MI into extreme
northeast WI (in the wake of weak morning convection).
Thermodynamic recovery from weak morning convection and some
enhancement to westerly deep-layer shear suggests the potential for
semi-organized storms/clusters and a low-end threat for wind damage
and hail for a few hours later this afternoon/evening.
Read more
2 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0250 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Valid 082000Z - 091200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF THE
MID-ATLANTIC...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected across the Mid-Atlantic
states. More isolated severe storms are expected across portions of
the Plains into the Mid Mississippi Valley.
...20Z Update...
Minor changes were made to the outlook based on current
observations. Otherwise, the previous forecast reasoning remains
valid.
..Wendt.. 07/08/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025/
...Mid-Atlantic this afternoon/evening...
Strong surface heating is underway within a very moist boundary
layer consisting of generally mid 70s dewpoints. Regional 12z
soundings, modified for afternoon temperatures and associated
vertical mixing, suggest the potential for MLCAPE near or above 2000
J/kg with minimal convective inhibition. Larger-scale forcing for
ascent will be modest with a slightly enhanced (~25 kt) belt of
west-southwesterly midlevel flow from the OH Valley to southern New
England, though the primary focus for scattered thunderstorm
development is expected to be a surface trough from the immediate
lee of the Blue Ridge into MA by mid afternoon. Though midlevel
lapse rates will not be particularly steep, steepening low-level
lapse rates with hot afternoon temperatures in the low-mid 90s will
drive strong downdraft potential (per DCAPE near 1000 J/kg) and the
resultant threat for wind damage with multicell clusters and/or
short line segments.
...Central High Plains to the Ozarks this afternoon/evening...
A weakening outflow boundary from overnight convection is moving
southeastward into southeast MO, and southward into OK, while a
remnant MCV moves eastward over northern MO. South of the outflow,
clouds and ongoing convection from eastern OK to the MO Bootheel
cast uncertainty on the degree of destabilization this afternoon in
advance of this portion of the outflow. Farther west, stronger
surface heating/destabilization is expected along and south of the
outflow into OK, but forcing for ascent is in question with gradual
height rises expected aloft. A weak lee trough could help focus at
least isolated thunderstorm development this afternoon/evening
across the central High Plains, where northwesterly flow
aloft/hodograph length could be sufficient for a high-based
supercell or two. However, a specific focus for initiation and the
potential for upscale growth are both uncertain given the background
height rises and little forcing for ascent. Thus, will maintain the
broad MRGL area for a low probability/conditional threat for severe
outflow winds and some hail.
...Northeast WI/Upper MI this afternoon/evening...
A midlevel shortwave trough and weak surface reflection will cross
northern WI and western Upper MI this afternoon, and a few storms
will be possible by mid afternoon from central Upper MI into extreme
northeast WI (in the wake of weak morning convection).
Thermodynamic recovery from weak morning convection and some
enhancement to westerly deep-layer shear suggests the potential for
semi-organized storms/clusters and a low-end threat for wind damage
and hail for a few hours later this afternoon/evening.
Read more
2 months ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0250 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Valid 082000Z - 091200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF THE
MID-ATLANTIC...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected across the Mid-Atlantic
states. More isolated severe storms are expected across portions of
the Plains into the Mid Mississippi Valley.
...20Z Update...
Minor changes were made to the outlook based on current
observations. Otherwise, the previous forecast reasoning remains
valid.
..Wendt.. 07/08/2025
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1125 AM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025/
...Mid-Atlantic this afternoon/evening...
Strong surface heating is underway within a very moist boundary
layer consisting of generally mid 70s dewpoints. Regional 12z
soundings, modified for afternoon temperatures and associated
vertical mixing, suggest the potential for MLCAPE near or above 2000
J/kg with minimal convective inhibition. Larger-scale forcing for
ascent will be modest with a slightly enhanced (~25 kt) belt of
west-southwesterly midlevel flow from the OH Valley to southern New
England, though the primary focus for scattered thunderstorm
development is expected to be a surface trough from the immediate
lee of the Blue Ridge into MA by mid afternoon. Though midlevel
lapse rates will not be particularly steep, steepening low-level
lapse rates with hot afternoon temperatures in the low-mid 90s will
drive strong downdraft potential (per DCAPE near 1000 J/kg) and the
resultant threat for wind damage with multicell clusters and/or
short line segments.
...Central High Plains to the Ozarks this afternoon/evening...
A weakening outflow boundary from overnight convection is moving
southeastward into southeast MO, and southward into OK, while a
remnant MCV moves eastward over northern MO. South of the outflow,
clouds and ongoing convection from eastern OK to the MO Bootheel
cast uncertainty on the degree of destabilization this afternoon in
advance of this portion of the outflow. Farther west, stronger
surface heating/destabilization is expected along and south of the
outflow into OK, but forcing for ascent is in question with gradual
height rises expected aloft. A weak lee trough could help focus at
least isolated thunderstorm development this afternoon/evening
across the central High Plains, where northwesterly flow
aloft/hodograph length could be sufficient for a high-based
supercell or two. However, a specific focus for initiation and the
potential for upscale growth are both uncertain given the background
height rises and little forcing for ascent. Thus, will maintain the
broad MRGL area for a low probability/conditional threat for severe
outflow winds and some hail.
...Northeast WI/Upper MI this afternoon/evening...
A midlevel shortwave trough and weak surface reflection will cross
northern WI and western Upper MI this afternoon, and a few storms
will be possible by mid afternoon from central Upper MI into extreme
northeast WI (in the wake of weak morning convection).
Thermodynamic recovery from weak morning convection and some
enhancement to westerly deep-layer shear suggests the potential for
semi-organized storms/clusters and a low-end threat for wind damage
and hail for a few hours later this afternoon/evening.
Read more
2 months ago
MD 1605 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH UNLIKELY FOR THE CENTRAL CAROLINAS
Mesoscale Discussion 1605
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0104 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Areas affected...the central Carolinas
Concerning...Severe potential...Watch unlikely
Valid 081804Z - 082000Z
Probability of Watch Issuance...5 percent
SUMMARY...Thunderstorm coverage should increase through late
afternoon with a few embedded strong/severe thunderstorms across the
central Carolinas. The severe threat should remain too limited to
warrant watch issuance.
DISCUSSION...Thunderstorms are in the early stages of development
along a weak trough/confluence zone from central GA into central SC
with additional convection beginning to deepen off the southern
Appalachians in the western Carolinas. Strong diurnal heating across
the Carolinas, combined with seasonably high dewpoints in the mid
70s, is supporting a plume of 2500-3500 J/kg MLCAPE along the
Carolina coast into central NC per recent mesoanalysis estimates.
The high moisture content of the air mass will promote strong
water-loaded downdrafts, and lapse rates around 8 C/km within the
lowest 1-2 km should facilitate downward momentum transfer.
Consequently, strong to severe downburst winds appear possible -
especially across central NC where the best overlap of MLCAPE,
low-level lapse rates, and theta-e deficits should emerge by late
afternoon. Despite the very favorable buoyancy, any appreciable
deep-layer flow remains displaced well to the north, which will
promote mostly disorganized single-cell and multicell convection.
This will largely limit the duration and short-term predictability
of any appreciable severe threat.
..Moore/Thompson.. 07/08/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product...
ATTN...WFO...MHX...RAH...ILM...RNK...CHS...CAE...GSP...
LAT...LON 33308112 33478144 33818159 36068115 36408090 36498058
36507997 36477790 36217773 35757772 35237779 34717804
34127853 33777894 33407930 33147963 33098005 33158054
33308112
MOST PROBABLE PEAK WIND GUST...UP TO 60 MPH
Read more
2 months ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0229 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Valid 101200Z - 111200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE
CENTRAL/NORTHERN PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible over parts of the
central and northern Great Plains, mainly during the late afternoon
and evening on Thursday.
...KS/NE/SD/IA...
A shortwave impulse over the northeast Great Basin at 12Z Thursday
should slowly dampen as it tracks into the central Plains. A
separate, positive-tilt shortwave trough will amplify across
southwest Canada along the international border with the Northwest.
This should yield an effective split flow regime over the
northern/central Plains on Thursday/Thursday night.
Preceding low-level warm-advection driven convection on Thursday
morning should modulate the degree of downstream destabilization
from the Mid-MO Valley into the Upper Midwest. Primary severe
potential should evolve from scattered thunderstorms forming at peak
diurnal heating across the central High Plains to Black Hills
vicinity. With an initially pronounced EML, large buoyancy should be
pervasive downstream in KS to SD. Mid-level wind fields with the
decaying impulse appear erratic across guidance, indicative of
attendant MCV influences from prior-day convection. But it should be
sufficient for multicell clustering and supercells capable of mixed
severe wind/hail threats. A strengthening low-level jet on Thursday
evening, from the southern High Plains nosing towards the Mid-MO
Valley, should sustain an MCS eastward near its exit region. The
spatiotemporal extent of a severe wind threat overnight is rather
uncertain.
...ND and northwest MN...
Strengthening of deep-layer shear attendant to the southwest
Canadian shortwave trough is largely anticipated to occur during the
latter half of the period. This may still be enough to support
organized convection by early evening along a cold front trailing
into the eastern ND vicinity. Ample buoyancy and steep mid-level
lapse rates will be supportive of a couple supercells early that may
congeal into a south/southeast-moving cluster Thursday night.
Scattered large hail and damaging winds are possible.
...East...
A mid-level low will continue east across QC, with a belt of
moderate westerlies present across NY and New England. Weak (500-mb
winds below 20 kts) will be prevalent south of this belt in the
Mid-Atlantic States and Southeast. Widespread diurnal storm coverage
is again anticipated from the DE Valley southward, as the boundary
layer warms amid a broad plume of 70s surface dew points. Wet
microbursts producing localized damaging winds are the expected
hazard in this regime.
Convective coverage should be more scattered with northern extent.
But this activity may organize into transient semi-discrete cells
and multicell clusters with a risk for at least isolated damaging
winds and small to marginally severe hail. This region will be
monitored in later outlooks for a potential level 2-SLGT risk.
..Grams.. 07/08/2025
Read more
2 months ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0229 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Valid 101200Z - 111200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE
CENTRAL/NORTHERN PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible over parts of the
central and northern Great Plains, mainly during the late afternoon
and evening on Thursday.
...KS/NE/SD/IA...
A shortwave impulse over the northeast Great Basin at 12Z Thursday
should slowly dampen as it tracks into the central Plains. A
separate, positive-tilt shortwave trough will amplify across
southwest Canada along the international border with the Northwest.
This should yield an effective split flow regime over the
northern/central Plains on Thursday/Thursday night.
Preceding low-level warm-advection driven convection on Thursday
morning should modulate the degree of downstream destabilization
from the Mid-MO Valley into the Upper Midwest. Primary severe
potential should evolve from scattered thunderstorms forming at peak
diurnal heating across the central High Plains to Black Hills
vicinity. With an initially pronounced EML, large buoyancy should be
pervasive downstream in KS to SD. Mid-level wind fields with the
decaying impulse appear erratic across guidance, indicative of
attendant MCV influences from prior-day convection. But it should be
sufficient for multicell clustering and supercells capable of mixed
severe wind/hail threats. A strengthening low-level jet on Thursday
evening, from the southern High Plains nosing towards the Mid-MO
Valley, should sustain an MCS eastward near its exit region. The
spatiotemporal extent of a severe wind threat overnight is rather
uncertain.
...ND and northwest MN...
Strengthening of deep-layer shear attendant to the southwest
Canadian shortwave trough is largely anticipated to occur during the
latter half of the period. This may still be enough to support
organized convection by early evening along a cold front trailing
into the eastern ND vicinity. Ample buoyancy and steep mid-level
lapse rates will be supportive of a couple supercells early that may
congeal into a south/southeast-moving cluster Thursday night.
Scattered large hail and damaging winds are possible.
...East...
A mid-level low will continue east across QC, with a belt of
moderate westerlies present across NY and New England. Weak (500-mb
winds below 20 kts) will be prevalent south of this belt in the
Mid-Atlantic States and Southeast. Widespread diurnal storm coverage
is again anticipated from the DE Valley southward, as the boundary
layer warms amid a broad plume of 70s surface dew points. Wet
microbursts producing localized damaging winds are the expected
hazard in this regime.
Convective coverage should be more scattered with northern extent.
But this activity may organize into transient semi-discrete cells
and multicell clusters with a risk for at least isolated damaging
winds and small to marginally severe hail. This region will be
monitored in later outlooks for a potential level 2-SLGT risk.
..Grams.. 07/08/2025
Read more
2 months ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0229 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Valid 101200Z - 111200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE
CENTRAL/NORTHERN PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible over parts of the
central and northern Great Plains, mainly during the late afternoon
and evening on Thursday.
...KS/NE/SD/IA...
A shortwave impulse over the northeast Great Basin at 12Z Thursday
should slowly dampen as it tracks into the central Plains. A
separate, positive-tilt shortwave trough will amplify across
southwest Canada along the international border with the Northwest.
This should yield an effective split flow regime over the
northern/central Plains on Thursday/Thursday night.
Preceding low-level warm-advection driven convection on Thursday
morning should modulate the degree of downstream destabilization
from the Mid-MO Valley into the Upper Midwest. Primary severe
potential should evolve from scattered thunderstorms forming at peak
diurnal heating across the central High Plains to Black Hills
vicinity. With an initially pronounced EML, large buoyancy should be
pervasive downstream in KS to SD. Mid-level wind fields with the
decaying impulse appear erratic across guidance, indicative of
attendant MCV influences from prior-day convection. But it should be
sufficient for multicell clustering and supercells capable of mixed
severe wind/hail threats. A strengthening low-level jet on Thursday
evening, from the southern High Plains nosing towards the Mid-MO
Valley, should sustain an MCS eastward near its exit region. The
spatiotemporal extent of a severe wind threat overnight is rather
uncertain.
...ND and northwest MN...
Strengthening of deep-layer shear attendant to the southwest
Canadian shortwave trough is largely anticipated to occur during the
latter half of the period. This may still be enough to support
organized convection by early evening along a cold front trailing
into the eastern ND vicinity. Ample buoyancy and steep mid-level
lapse rates will be supportive of a couple supercells early that may
congeal into a south/southeast-moving cluster Thursday night.
Scattered large hail and damaging winds are possible.
...East...
A mid-level low will continue east across QC, with a belt of
moderate westerlies present across NY and New England. Weak (500-mb
winds below 20 kts) will be prevalent south of this belt in the
Mid-Atlantic States and Southeast. Widespread diurnal storm coverage
is again anticipated from the DE Valley southward, as the boundary
layer warms amid a broad plume of 70s surface dew points. Wet
microbursts producing localized damaging winds are the expected
hazard in this regime.
Convective coverage should be more scattered with northern extent.
But this activity may organize into transient semi-discrete cells
and multicell clusters with a risk for at least isolated damaging
winds and small to marginally severe hail. This region will be
monitored in later outlooks for a potential level 2-SLGT risk.
..Grams.. 07/08/2025
Read more
2 months ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0229 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Valid 101200Z - 111200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE
CENTRAL/NORTHERN PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible over parts of the
central and northern Great Plains, mainly during the late afternoon
and evening on Thursday.
...KS/NE/SD/IA...
A shortwave impulse over the northeast Great Basin at 12Z Thursday
should slowly dampen as it tracks into the central Plains. A
separate, positive-tilt shortwave trough will amplify across
southwest Canada along the international border with the Northwest.
This should yield an effective split flow regime over the
northern/central Plains on Thursday/Thursday night.
Preceding low-level warm-advection driven convection on Thursday
morning should modulate the degree of downstream destabilization
from the Mid-MO Valley into the Upper Midwest. Primary severe
potential should evolve from scattered thunderstorms forming at peak
diurnal heating across the central High Plains to Black Hills
vicinity. With an initially pronounced EML, large buoyancy should be
pervasive downstream in KS to SD. Mid-level wind fields with the
decaying impulse appear erratic across guidance, indicative of
attendant MCV influences from prior-day convection. But it should be
sufficient for multicell clustering and supercells capable of mixed
severe wind/hail threats. A strengthening low-level jet on Thursday
evening, from the southern High Plains nosing towards the Mid-MO
Valley, should sustain an MCS eastward near its exit region. The
spatiotemporal extent of a severe wind threat overnight is rather
uncertain.
...ND and northwest MN...
Strengthening of deep-layer shear attendant to the southwest
Canadian shortwave trough is largely anticipated to occur during the
latter half of the period. This may still be enough to support
organized convection by early evening along a cold front trailing
into the eastern ND vicinity. Ample buoyancy and steep mid-level
lapse rates will be supportive of a couple supercells early that may
congeal into a south/southeast-moving cluster Thursday night.
Scattered large hail and damaging winds are possible.
...East...
A mid-level low will continue east across QC, with a belt of
moderate westerlies present across NY and New England. Weak (500-mb
winds below 20 kts) will be prevalent south of this belt in the
Mid-Atlantic States and Southeast. Widespread diurnal storm coverage
is again anticipated from the DE Valley southward, as the boundary
layer warms amid a broad plume of 70s surface dew points. Wet
microbursts producing localized damaging winds are the expected
hazard in this regime.
Convective coverage should be more scattered with northern extent.
But this activity may organize into transient semi-discrete cells
and multicell clusters with a risk for at least isolated damaging
winds and small to marginally severe hail. This region will be
monitored in later outlooks for a potential level 2-SLGT risk.
..Grams.. 07/08/2025
Read more
2 months ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0229 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Valid 101200Z - 111200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE
CENTRAL/NORTHERN PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible over parts of the
central and northern Great Plains, mainly during the late afternoon
and evening on Thursday.
...KS/NE/SD/IA...
A shortwave impulse over the northeast Great Basin at 12Z Thursday
should slowly dampen as it tracks into the central Plains. A
separate, positive-tilt shortwave trough will amplify across
southwest Canada along the international border with the Northwest.
This should yield an effective split flow regime over the
northern/central Plains on Thursday/Thursday night.
Preceding low-level warm-advection driven convection on Thursday
morning should modulate the degree of downstream destabilization
from the Mid-MO Valley into the Upper Midwest. Primary severe
potential should evolve from scattered thunderstorms forming at peak
diurnal heating across the central High Plains to Black Hills
vicinity. With an initially pronounced EML, large buoyancy should be
pervasive downstream in KS to SD. Mid-level wind fields with the
decaying impulse appear erratic across guidance, indicative of
attendant MCV influences from prior-day convection. But it should be
sufficient for multicell clustering and supercells capable of mixed
severe wind/hail threats. A strengthening low-level jet on Thursday
evening, from the southern High Plains nosing towards the Mid-MO
Valley, should sustain an MCS eastward near its exit region. The
spatiotemporal extent of a severe wind threat overnight is rather
uncertain.
...ND and northwest MN...
Strengthening of deep-layer shear attendant to the southwest
Canadian shortwave trough is largely anticipated to occur during the
latter half of the period. This may still be enough to support
organized convection by early evening along a cold front trailing
into the eastern ND vicinity. Ample buoyancy and steep mid-level
lapse rates will be supportive of a couple supercells early that may
congeal into a south/southeast-moving cluster Thursday night.
Scattered large hail and damaging winds are possible.
...East...
A mid-level low will continue east across QC, with a belt of
moderate westerlies present across NY and New England. Weak (500-mb
winds below 20 kts) will be prevalent south of this belt in the
Mid-Atlantic States and Southeast. Widespread diurnal storm coverage
is again anticipated from the DE Valley southward, as the boundary
layer warms amid a broad plume of 70s surface dew points. Wet
microbursts producing localized damaging winds are the expected
hazard in this regime.
Convective coverage should be more scattered with northern extent.
But this activity may organize into transient semi-discrete cells
and multicell clusters with a risk for at least isolated damaging
winds and small to marginally severe hail. This region will be
monitored in later outlooks for a potential level 2-SLGT risk.
..Grams.. 07/08/2025
Read more
2 months ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0229 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Valid 101200Z - 111200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE
CENTRAL/NORTHERN PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible over parts of the
central and northern Great Plains, mainly during the late afternoon
and evening on Thursday.
...KS/NE/SD/IA...
A shortwave impulse over the northeast Great Basin at 12Z Thursday
should slowly dampen as it tracks into the central Plains. A
separate, positive-tilt shortwave trough will amplify across
southwest Canada along the international border with the Northwest.
This should yield an effective split flow regime over the
northern/central Plains on Thursday/Thursday night.
Preceding low-level warm-advection driven convection on Thursday
morning should modulate the degree of downstream destabilization
from the Mid-MO Valley into the Upper Midwest. Primary severe
potential should evolve from scattered thunderstorms forming at peak
diurnal heating across the central High Plains to Black Hills
vicinity. With an initially pronounced EML, large buoyancy should be
pervasive downstream in KS to SD. Mid-level wind fields with the
decaying impulse appear erratic across guidance, indicative of
attendant MCV influences from prior-day convection. But it should be
sufficient for multicell clustering and supercells capable of mixed
severe wind/hail threats. A strengthening low-level jet on Thursday
evening, from the southern High Plains nosing towards the Mid-MO
Valley, should sustain an MCS eastward near its exit region. The
spatiotemporal extent of a severe wind threat overnight is rather
uncertain.
...ND and northwest MN...
Strengthening of deep-layer shear attendant to the southwest
Canadian shortwave trough is largely anticipated to occur during the
latter half of the period. This may still be enough to support
organized convection by early evening along a cold front trailing
into the eastern ND vicinity. Ample buoyancy and steep mid-level
lapse rates will be supportive of a couple supercells early that may
congeal into a south/southeast-moving cluster Thursday night.
Scattered large hail and damaging winds are possible.
...East...
A mid-level low will continue east across QC, with a belt of
moderate westerlies present across NY and New England. Weak (500-mb
winds below 20 kts) will be prevalent south of this belt in the
Mid-Atlantic States and Southeast. Widespread diurnal storm coverage
is again anticipated from the DE Valley southward, as the boundary
layer warms amid a broad plume of 70s surface dew points. Wet
microbursts producing localized damaging winds are the expected
hazard in this regime.
Convective coverage should be more scattered with northern extent.
But this activity may organize into transient semi-discrete cells
and multicell clusters with a risk for at least isolated damaging
winds and small to marginally severe hail. This region will be
monitored in later outlooks for a potential level 2-SLGT risk.
..Grams.. 07/08/2025
Read more
2 months ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0229 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Valid 101200Z - 111200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE
CENTRAL/NORTHERN PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible over parts of the
central and northern Great Plains, mainly during the late afternoon
and evening on Thursday.
...KS/NE/SD/IA...
A shortwave impulse over the northeast Great Basin at 12Z Thursday
should slowly dampen as it tracks into the central Plains. A
separate, positive-tilt shortwave trough will amplify across
southwest Canada along the international border with the Northwest.
This should yield an effective split flow regime over the
northern/central Plains on Thursday/Thursday night.
Preceding low-level warm-advection driven convection on Thursday
morning should modulate the degree of downstream destabilization
from the Mid-MO Valley into the Upper Midwest. Primary severe
potential should evolve from scattered thunderstorms forming at peak
diurnal heating across the central High Plains to Black Hills
vicinity. With an initially pronounced EML, large buoyancy should be
pervasive downstream in KS to SD. Mid-level wind fields with the
decaying impulse appear erratic across guidance, indicative of
attendant MCV influences from prior-day convection. But it should be
sufficient for multicell clustering and supercells capable of mixed
severe wind/hail threats. A strengthening low-level jet on Thursday
evening, from the southern High Plains nosing towards the Mid-MO
Valley, should sustain an MCS eastward near its exit region. The
spatiotemporal extent of a severe wind threat overnight is rather
uncertain.
...ND and northwest MN...
Strengthening of deep-layer shear attendant to the southwest
Canadian shortwave trough is largely anticipated to occur during the
latter half of the period. This may still be enough to support
organized convection by early evening along a cold front trailing
into the eastern ND vicinity. Ample buoyancy and steep mid-level
lapse rates will be supportive of a couple supercells early that may
congeal into a south/southeast-moving cluster Thursday night.
Scattered large hail and damaging winds are possible.
...East...
A mid-level low will continue east across QC, with a belt of
moderate westerlies present across NY and New England. Weak (500-mb
winds below 20 kts) will be prevalent south of this belt in the
Mid-Atlantic States and Southeast. Widespread diurnal storm coverage
is again anticipated from the DE Valley southward, as the boundary
layer warms amid a broad plume of 70s surface dew points. Wet
microbursts producing localized damaging winds are the expected
hazard in this regime.
Convective coverage should be more scattered with northern extent.
But this activity may organize into transient semi-discrete cells
and multicell clusters with a risk for at least isolated damaging
winds and small to marginally severe hail. This region will be
monitored in later outlooks for a potential level 2-SLGT risk.
..Grams.. 07/08/2025
Read more
2 months ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0229 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Valid 101200Z - 111200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE
CENTRAL/NORTHERN PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible over parts of the
central and northern Great Plains, mainly during the late afternoon
and evening on Thursday.
...KS/NE/SD/IA...
A shortwave impulse over the northeast Great Basin at 12Z Thursday
should slowly dampen as it tracks into the central Plains. A
separate, positive-tilt shortwave trough will amplify across
southwest Canada along the international border with the Northwest.
This should yield an effective split flow regime over the
northern/central Plains on Thursday/Thursday night.
Preceding low-level warm-advection driven convection on Thursday
morning should modulate the degree of downstream destabilization
from the Mid-MO Valley into the Upper Midwest. Primary severe
potential should evolve from scattered thunderstorms forming at peak
diurnal heating across the central High Plains to Black Hills
vicinity. With an initially pronounced EML, large buoyancy should be
pervasive downstream in KS to SD. Mid-level wind fields with the
decaying impulse appear erratic across guidance, indicative of
attendant MCV influences from prior-day convection. But it should be
sufficient for multicell clustering and supercells capable of mixed
severe wind/hail threats. A strengthening low-level jet on Thursday
evening, from the southern High Plains nosing towards the Mid-MO
Valley, should sustain an MCS eastward near its exit region. The
spatiotemporal extent of a severe wind threat overnight is rather
uncertain.
...ND and northwest MN...
Strengthening of deep-layer shear attendant to the southwest
Canadian shortwave trough is largely anticipated to occur during the
latter half of the period. This may still be enough to support
organized convection by early evening along a cold front trailing
into the eastern ND vicinity. Ample buoyancy and steep mid-level
lapse rates will be supportive of a couple supercells early that may
congeal into a south/southeast-moving cluster Thursday night.
Scattered large hail and damaging winds are possible.
...East...
A mid-level low will continue east across QC, with a belt of
moderate westerlies present across NY and New England. Weak (500-mb
winds below 20 kts) will be prevalent south of this belt in the
Mid-Atlantic States and Southeast. Widespread diurnal storm coverage
is again anticipated from the DE Valley southward, as the boundary
layer warms amid a broad plume of 70s surface dew points. Wet
microbursts producing localized damaging winds are the expected
hazard in this regime.
Convective coverage should be more scattered with northern extent.
But this activity may organize into transient semi-discrete cells
and multicell clusters with a risk for at least isolated damaging
winds and small to marginally severe hail. This region will be
monitored in later outlooks for a potential level 2-SLGT risk.
..Grams.. 07/08/2025
Read more
2 months ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0229 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Valid 101200Z - 111200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE
CENTRAL/NORTHERN PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible over parts of the
central and northern Great Plains, mainly during the late afternoon
and evening on Thursday.
...KS/NE/SD/IA...
A shortwave impulse over the northeast Great Basin at 12Z Thursday
should slowly dampen as it tracks into the central Plains. A
separate, positive-tilt shortwave trough will amplify across
southwest Canada along the international border with the Northwest.
This should yield an effective split flow regime over the
northern/central Plains on Thursday/Thursday night.
Preceding low-level warm-advection driven convection on Thursday
morning should modulate the degree of downstream destabilization
from the Mid-MO Valley into the Upper Midwest. Primary severe
potential should evolve from scattered thunderstorms forming at peak
diurnal heating across the central High Plains to Black Hills
vicinity. With an initially pronounced EML, large buoyancy should be
pervasive downstream in KS to SD. Mid-level wind fields with the
decaying impulse appear erratic across guidance, indicative of
attendant MCV influences from prior-day convection. But it should be
sufficient for multicell clustering and supercells capable of mixed
severe wind/hail threats. A strengthening low-level jet on Thursday
evening, from the southern High Plains nosing towards the Mid-MO
Valley, should sustain an MCS eastward near its exit region. The
spatiotemporal extent of a severe wind threat overnight is rather
uncertain.
...ND and northwest MN...
Strengthening of deep-layer shear attendant to the southwest
Canadian shortwave trough is largely anticipated to occur during the
latter half of the period. This may still be enough to support
organized convection by early evening along a cold front trailing
into the eastern ND vicinity. Ample buoyancy and steep mid-level
lapse rates will be supportive of a couple supercells early that may
congeal into a south/southeast-moving cluster Thursday night.
Scattered large hail and damaging winds are possible.
...East...
A mid-level low will continue east across QC, with a belt of
moderate westerlies present across NY and New England. Weak (500-mb
winds below 20 kts) will be prevalent south of this belt in the
Mid-Atlantic States and Southeast. Widespread diurnal storm coverage
is again anticipated from the DE Valley southward, as the boundary
layer warms amid a broad plume of 70s surface dew points. Wet
microbursts producing localized damaging winds are the expected
hazard in this regime.
Convective coverage should be more scattered with northern extent.
But this activity may organize into transient semi-discrete cells
and multicell clusters with a risk for at least isolated damaging
winds and small to marginally severe hail. This region will be
monitored in later outlooks for a potential level 2-SLGT risk.
..Grams.. 07/08/2025
Read more
2 months ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0229 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Valid 101200Z - 111200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE
CENTRAL/NORTHERN PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible over parts of the
central and northern Great Plains, mainly during the late afternoon
and evening on Thursday.
...KS/NE/SD/IA...
A shortwave impulse over the northeast Great Basin at 12Z Thursday
should slowly dampen as it tracks into the central Plains. A
separate, positive-tilt shortwave trough will amplify across
southwest Canada along the international border with the Northwest.
This should yield an effective split flow regime over the
northern/central Plains on Thursday/Thursday night.
Preceding low-level warm-advection driven convection on Thursday
morning should modulate the degree of downstream destabilization
from the Mid-MO Valley into the Upper Midwest. Primary severe
potential should evolve from scattered thunderstorms forming at peak
diurnal heating across the central High Plains to Black Hills
vicinity. With an initially pronounced EML, large buoyancy should be
pervasive downstream in KS to SD. Mid-level wind fields with the
decaying impulse appear erratic across guidance, indicative of
attendant MCV influences from prior-day convection. But it should be
sufficient for multicell clustering and supercells capable of mixed
severe wind/hail threats. A strengthening low-level jet on Thursday
evening, from the southern High Plains nosing towards the Mid-MO
Valley, should sustain an MCS eastward near its exit region. The
spatiotemporal extent of a severe wind threat overnight is rather
uncertain.
...ND and northwest MN...
Strengthening of deep-layer shear attendant to the southwest
Canadian shortwave trough is largely anticipated to occur during the
latter half of the period. This may still be enough to support
organized convection by early evening along a cold front trailing
into the eastern ND vicinity. Ample buoyancy and steep mid-level
lapse rates will be supportive of a couple supercells early that may
congeal into a south/southeast-moving cluster Thursday night.
Scattered large hail and damaging winds are possible.
...East...
A mid-level low will continue east across QC, with a belt of
moderate westerlies present across NY and New England. Weak (500-mb
winds below 20 kts) will be prevalent south of this belt in the
Mid-Atlantic States and Southeast. Widespread diurnal storm coverage
is again anticipated from the DE Valley southward, as the boundary
layer warms amid a broad plume of 70s surface dew points. Wet
microbursts producing localized damaging winds are the expected
hazard in this regime.
Convective coverage should be more scattered with northern extent.
But this activity may organize into transient semi-discrete cells
and multicell clusters with a risk for at least isolated damaging
winds and small to marginally severe hail. This region will be
monitored in later outlooks for a potential level 2-SLGT risk.
..Grams.. 07/08/2025
Read more
2 months ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0229 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Valid 101200Z - 111200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE
CENTRAL/NORTHERN PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible over parts of the
central and northern Great Plains, mainly during the late afternoon
and evening on Thursday.
...KS/NE/SD/IA...
A shortwave impulse over the northeast Great Basin at 12Z Thursday
should slowly dampen as it tracks into the central Plains. A
separate, positive-tilt shortwave trough will amplify across
southwest Canada along the international border with the Northwest.
This should yield an effective split flow regime over the
northern/central Plains on Thursday/Thursday night.
Preceding low-level warm-advection driven convection on Thursday
morning should modulate the degree of downstream destabilization
from the Mid-MO Valley into the Upper Midwest. Primary severe
potential should evolve from scattered thunderstorms forming at peak
diurnal heating across the central High Plains to Black Hills
vicinity. With an initially pronounced EML, large buoyancy should be
pervasive downstream in KS to SD. Mid-level wind fields with the
decaying impulse appear erratic across guidance, indicative of
attendant MCV influences from prior-day convection. But it should be
sufficient for multicell clustering and supercells capable of mixed
severe wind/hail threats. A strengthening low-level jet on Thursday
evening, from the southern High Plains nosing towards the Mid-MO
Valley, should sustain an MCS eastward near its exit region. The
spatiotemporal extent of a severe wind threat overnight is rather
uncertain.
...ND and northwest MN...
Strengthening of deep-layer shear attendant to the southwest
Canadian shortwave trough is largely anticipated to occur during the
latter half of the period. This may still be enough to support
organized convection by early evening along a cold front trailing
into the eastern ND vicinity. Ample buoyancy and steep mid-level
lapse rates will be supportive of a couple supercells early that may
congeal into a south/southeast-moving cluster Thursday night.
Scattered large hail and damaging winds are possible.
...East...
A mid-level low will continue east across QC, with a belt of
moderate westerlies present across NY and New England. Weak (500-mb
winds below 20 kts) will be prevalent south of this belt in the
Mid-Atlantic States and Southeast. Widespread diurnal storm coverage
is again anticipated from the DE Valley southward, as the boundary
layer warms amid a broad plume of 70s surface dew points. Wet
microbursts producing localized damaging winds are the expected
hazard in this regime.
Convective coverage should be more scattered with northern extent.
But this activity may organize into transient semi-discrete cells
and multicell clusters with a risk for at least isolated damaging
winds and small to marginally severe hail. This region will be
monitored in later outlooks for a potential level 2-SLGT risk.
..Grams.. 07/08/2025
Read more
2 months ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0229 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Valid 101200Z - 111200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE
CENTRAL/NORTHERN PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible over parts of the
central and northern Great Plains, mainly during the late afternoon
and evening on Thursday.
...KS/NE/SD/IA...
A shortwave impulse over the northeast Great Basin at 12Z Thursday
should slowly dampen as it tracks into the central Plains. A
separate, positive-tilt shortwave trough will amplify across
southwest Canada along the international border with the Northwest.
This should yield an effective split flow regime over the
northern/central Plains on Thursday/Thursday night.
Preceding low-level warm-advection driven convection on Thursday
morning should modulate the degree of downstream destabilization
from the Mid-MO Valley into the Upper Midwest. Primary severe
potential should evolve from scattered thunderstorms forming at peak
diurnal heating across the central High Plains to Black Hills
vicinity. With an initially pronounced EML, large buoyancy should be
pervasive downstream in KS to SD. Mid-level wind fields with the
decaying impulse appear erratic across guidance, indicative of
attendant MCV influences from prior-day convection. But it should be
sufficient for multicell clustering and supercells capable of mixed
severe wind/hail threats. A strengthening low-level jet on Thursday
evening, from the southern High Plains nosing towards the Mid-MO
Valley, should sustain an MCS eastward near its exit region. The
spatiotemporal extent of a severe wind threat overnight is rather
uncertain.
...ND and northwest MN...
Strengthening of deep-layer shear attendant to the southwest
Canadian shortwave trough is largely anticipated to occur during the
latter half of the period. This may still be enough to support
organized convection by early evening along a cold front trailing
into the eastern ND vicinity. Ample buoyancy and steep mid-level
lapse rates will be supportive of a couple supercells early that may
congeal into a south/southeast-moving cluster Thursday night.
Scattered large hail and damaging winds are possible.
...East...
A mid-level low will continue east across QC, with a belt of
moderate westerlies present across NY and New England. Weak (500-mb
winds below 20 kts) will be prevalent south of this belt in the
Mid-Atlantic States and Southeast. Widespread diurnal storm coverage
is again anticipated from the DE Valley southward, as the boundary
layer warms amid a broad plume of 70s surface dew points. Wet
microbursts producing localized damaging winds are the expected
hazard in this regime.
Convective coverage should be more scattered with northern extent.
But this activity may organize into transient semi-discrete cells
and multicell clusters with a risk for at least isolated damaging
winds and small to marginally severe hail. This region will be
monitored in later outlooks for a potential level 2-SLGT risk.
..Grams.. 07/08/2025
Read more
2 months ago
SPC 1930Z Day 3 Outlook
Day 3 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0229 PM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Valid 101200Z - 111200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE
CENTRAL/NORTHERN PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible over parts of the
central and northern Great Plains, mainly during the late afternoon
and evening on Thursday.
...KS/NE/SD/IA...
A shortwave impulse over the northeast Great Basin at 12Z Thursday
should slowly dampen as it tracks into the central Plains. A
separate, positive-tilt shortwave trough will amplify across
southwest Canada along the international border with the Northwest.
This should yield an effective split flow regime over the
northern/central Plains on Thursday/Thursday night.
Preceding low-level warm-advection driven convection on Thursday
morning should modulate the degree of downstream destabilization
from the Mid-MO Valley into the Upper Midwest. Primary severe
potential should evolve from scattered thunderstorms forming at peak
diurnal heating across the central High Plains to Black Hills
vicinity. With an initially pronounced EML, large buoyancy should be
pervasive downstream in KS to SD. Mid-level wind fields with the
decaying impulse appear erratic across guidance, indicative of
attendant MCV influences from prior-day convection. But it should be
sufficient for multicell clustering and supercells capable of mixed
severe wind/hail threats. A strengthening low-level jet on Thursday
evening, from the southern High Plains nosing towards the Mid-MO
Valley, should sustain an MCS eastward near its exit region. The
spatiotemporal extent of a severe wind threat overnight is rather
uncertain.
...ND and northwest MN...
Strengthening of deep-layer shear attendant to the southwest
Canadian shortwave trough is largely anticipated to occur during the
latter half of the period. This may still be enough to support
organized convection by early evening along a cold front trailing
into the eastern ND vicinity. Ample buoyancy and steep mid-level
lapse rates will be supportive of a couple supercells early that may
congeal into a south/southeast-moving cluster Thursday night.
Scattered large hail and damaging winds are possible.
...East...
A mid-level low will continue east across QC, with a belt of
moderate westerlies present across NY and New England. Weak (500-mb
winds below 20 kts) will be prevalent south of this belt in the
Mid-Atlantic States and Southeast. Widespread diurnal storm coverage
is again anticipated from the DE Valley southward, as the boundary
layer warms amid a broad plume of 70s surface dew points. Wet
microbursts producing localized damaging winds are the expected
hazard in this regime.
Convective coverage should be more scattered with northern extent.
But this activity may organize into transient semi-discrete cells
and multicell clusters with a risk for at least isolated damaging
winds and small to marginally severe hail. This region will be
monitored in later outlooks for a potential level 2-SLGT risk.
..Grams.. 07/08/2025
Read more
2 months ago
WW 0496 Status Updates
040-
STATUS REPORT ON WW 496
THE SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES ACROSS THE ENTIRE WATCH AREA.
..MOORE..07/08/25
ATTN...WFO...OKX...LWX...PHI...AKQ...CTP...RNK...
STATUS REPORT FOR WS 496
SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS
CTC001-082040-
CT
. CONNECTICUT COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
FAIRFIELD
DEC001-003-005-082040-
DE
. DELAWARE COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
KENT NEW CASTLE SUSSEX
DCC001-082040-
DC
. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
MDC003-005-009-011-013-015-017-019-021-025-027-029-031-033-035-
Read more
2 months ago
MD 1604 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH UNLIKELY FOR PORTIONS OF NEW ENGLAND
Mesoscale Discussion 1604
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1157 AM CDT Tue Jul 08 2025
Areas affected...Portions of New England
Concerning...Severe potential...Watch unlikely
Valid 081657Z - 081900Z
Probability of Watch Issuance...20 percent
SUMMARY...Isolated to scattered thunderstorms will pose a severe
hail and wind risk across part of New England this afternoon. Storm
coverage is expected to remain sufficiently limited to preclude
watch issuance.
DISCUSSION...GOES IR imagery and MRMS vertically integrated liquid
show steady intensification of weak thunderstorms across southern NY
ahead of a diffuse cold front. Further growth of these cells is
expected over the next several hours as temperatures continue to
warm and bolster MLCAPE through late afternoon. Upstream VWPs
recently sampled 20-35 knot mid-level winds associated with a weak
impulse approaching the New England region. The arrival of this
perturbation through peak heating will help elongate hodographs and
promote some increase in storm organization/longevity, and may
support a weak supercell or two. Consequently, some threat for
severe hail (most likely near/below 1.25 inch in diameter) may be
emerging if discrete modes can be maintained. Otherwise, the primary
hazard will remain strong to severe downburst winds, especially if
more organized clustering can occur. In general, nebulous forcing
for ascent will likely limit overall storm coverage and should
negate the need for a watch, though convective trends will be
monitored.
..Moore/Thompson.. 07/08/2025
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product...
ATTN...WFO...BOX...OKX...ALY...
LAT...LON 41267225 41137343 41257386 41427424 42087413 42317369
42497284 42717078 42437053 42107038 41937038 41737033
41597040 41527058 41267225
MOST PROBABLE PEAK WIND GUST...55-70 MPH
MOST PROBABLE PEAK HAIL SIZE...UP TO 1.25 IN
Read more
Checked
5 years 11 months ago
Storm Prediction Center
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