• DAY1 3/5 and 2/5 RISK AREAS POSTED

    From Mike Powell@618:250/6 to All on Tue Apr 14 07:41:20 2026
    ACUS01 KWNS 140551
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 140550

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1250 AM CDT Tue Apr 14 2026

    Valid 141200Z - 151200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE MIDWEST...

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE CENTRAL
    TO SOUTHERN PLAINS AND PARTS OF THE NORTHEAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are expected this afternoon through tonight
    from the southern Plains to the Great Lakes. Large to very large
    hail, a few tornadoes (some strong), and damaging wind gusts will be
    possible, particularly across parts of eastern Iowa, northern
    Illinois, and southern Wisconsin. Additional severe storms, mainly
    producing strong wind gusts, will be possible across parts of the
    Northeast this afternoon.

    ...Synopsis...
    An upper wave is evident in recent water-vapor imagery across the
    southern Great Basin. This trough will translate east into the
    Plains through today, reaching the Great Lakes region by tonight.
    This will support slight deepening of a diffuse surface low analyzed
    over the central High Plains as it drifts east towards the lower MO
    River Valley. Ahead of the low, an expansive warm sector
    (characterized by widespread mid to upper 60s dewpoints) remains in
    place from the southern Plains northeastward into the upper MS
    Valley region. Strong to severe thunderstorms are expected along a
    composite outflow boundary/warm front from eastern IA into southern
    WI/northern IL as well as along a dryline draped from eastern KS
    into OK and TX. Further east, a mid-level wave associated with
    ongoing convection over the Great Lakes will support re-intensification/re-development of strong/severe storms across the Northeast.

    ...Midwest...

    An outflow boundary emanating from the ongoing MCS across the Great
    Lakes will likely be draped across the Midwest early this morning.
    This boundary is forecast to drift northward within a southerly flow
    regime as an effective warm front ahead of the approaching surface
    low and upper wave. Latest guidance generally depicts this boundary
    stalling across eastern IA into southern WI by late afternoon when
    daytime heating and ascent ahead of the upper wave will erode
    inhibition and promote convective initiation along the boundary.

    Dewpoints in the mid to upper 60s coupled with steep mid-level lapse
    rates (already noted in upstream 00z RAOBs) will support MLCAPE
    values near 2500 J/kg by late afternoon. Moderate buoyancy combined
    with 45-55 knots of effective bulk shear will be highly favorable
    for organized convection. Capping at the base of the EML should
    initially limit thunderstorm coverage and favor discrete supercells
    along the boundary. In addition to very large hail (possibly up to
    2-3 inches in diameter), enhanced low-level SRH along the boundary
    may support a corridor of locally higher tornado potential,
    including the potential for significant tornadoes. With time,
    easterly storm motions along the boundary will promote upscale
    growth with an increasing wind threat heading into the late evening hours.

    The primary uncertainty will be the location of the boundary by late
    afternoon. 30% hail and 10% tornado probabilities were adjusted to
    reflect the most likely placement of the boundary based on a
    consensus of guidance; however, exact placement of the boundary will
    be conditional on the precise evolution of the morning MCS.
    Similarly, how quickly upscale growth occurs after initiation may
    modulate the duration of the significant hail/tornado threat.

    ...Kansas into Oklahoma and Texas...

    Modest height falls across the central to southern Plains combined
    with weak convergence along the dryline will likely support isolated
    to perhaps scattered thunderstorms from eastern KS southward into TX
    this afternoon. Consensus among latest HREF/REFS guidance is that
    initiation is most probable across northwest TX into central OK -
    possibly ahead of a subtle mid-level wave, though in reality the
    unfocused nature of the broad-scale ascent suggests that initiation
    will be possible anywhere along the dryline where low-level
    convergence can be maximized. Regardless, ample buoyancy within the
    warm sector (2500-3000 J/kg MLCAPE sampled in evening RAOBs) coupled
    with 30-40 knots of effective bulk shear will support supercells
    with an attendant threat for large hail (possibly exceeding 2 inches
    in diameter). Some tornado threat will likely materialize around and
    after 00 UTC as the nocturnal jet strengthens and enlarges low-level hodographs.

    ...Northeast...

    A low-amplitude upper wave associated with an ongoing MCS across the
    Great Lakes will migrate eastward towards the Northeast through the
    day. Residual convection associated with the MCS may linger through
    morning before re-intensifying by early afternoon as daytime heating
    supports steepening low-level lapse rates and increasing MLCAPE
    values (likely up to the 500-1000 J/kg range). While buoyancy will
    likely remain weak, 35-40 knot bulk shear through the CAPE-bearing
    layer and focused ascent ahead of a low-amplitude upper wave will
    likely support organization of convective bands with an attendant
    threat for strong to severe winds.

    ..Moore/Wendt.. 04/14/2026

    $$
    --- MultiMail/DOS
    * Origin: Project Scorpio TEST (618:250/6)