BillyBobzWildWX wrote:The MCD complex screwed a lot of the Illinois stuff up. The cells in Southern MI got off to a good start, though they became more high based as they moved eastward out of the best shear environment, and seeing that at one point they were almost forming on top of each other, they were somewhat robbing each other's environments and congealing into a disorganized squall rather than surface based rotaters. Everything to the west today screwed us over, and where the outflow boundaries set up didn't exactly help for initiation over here. If initation had occured 75-100 miles to the southwest of where it did, then I contend today could have been comparable to Palm Sunday in numbers {maybe not F4+, but just as many tornadoes}.
Oh well, still have to overlook tomorrow, looks like the goods will be to our south and east, probably another shaft day.
I'm not sure if initation had occurred further south things would've been worse. Three supercells did try to initiate further south. The southern two completely failed, and the northern one, though long-lasting, never really developed a tornadic circulation. I don't think the northern storms had any effect on these. Overall, though, I do not think a Palm Sunday situation was in the cards.