Bhow wrote:Another rain bust coming for the Austin/San Antonio corridor. Mother Nature realized the cap wouldn’t hold so she decided to throw her second best pitch at us - the dreaded outflow boundary
Radar looking solid down there now
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Bhow wrote:Another rain bust coming for the Austin/San Antonio corridor. Mother Nature realized the cap wouldn’t hold so she decided to throw her second best pitch at us - the dreaded outflow boundary
cheezyWXguy wrote:
I was just looking at that run, and I can’t tell if it’s out to lunch or not. 2 mature MCSs moving through NTX within about 12 hours of each other? Somehow the second one looks stronger even though the atmosphere doesn’t look to fully recover before it rolls through
Ntxw wrote:If recall June 2019 was down bursts/microburst from collapsing thunderstorm complex. Locally some winds then were higher in some locales. Today's was your more standard MCS with a strong leading storm that may (if confirmed) have dropped a lower end qlcs style spin up tornado anywhere from Denton/Collin County border to NE Dallas county and east/se. Everywhere else 60-80mph winds would do some tree damage.
Ntxw wrote:Will be missed and what a tenured career Marty had, vital services saving lives and money.
There is a center of low pressure in Southern Oklahoma, a couple of MCS/complex of storms will pivot through NTX today around that system.
bubba hotep wrote:Ntxw wrote:Will be missed and what a tenured career Marty had, vital services saving lives and money.
There is a center of low pressure in Southern Oklahoma, a couple of MCS/complex of storms will pivot through NTX today around that system.
Complex setup. Looks like the first impulse will mostly leave the atmosphere across DFW intact. The trailing one will have better timing, and southern flow will continue into DFW as it approaches. There are even some storms starting to pop out west of DFW in the southerly flow.
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