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April 6-19, 2024 | Severe Weather


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1 hour ago, cperry29 said:

I feel like I’m the only person in Ohio that’s watching this lol… maybe I’m missing something. 

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I’ve been following loosely. I suffer the same problem when we get multiple back to back to back snow storms in the winter (I should say potential storms these days 😂). After awhile I need a break of digging through models constantly. 

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Quote
 URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED
   Tornado Watch Number 122
   NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
   1220 PM EDT Wed Apr 17 2024

   The NWS Storm Prediction Center has issued a

   * Tornado Watch for portions of 
     Eastern Indiana
     Western and Central Ohio
     Lake Erie

   * Effective this Wednesday afternoon and evening from 1220 PM
     until 700 PM EDT.

   * Primary threats include...
     A couple tornadoes possible
     Scattered damaging wind gusts to 70 mph possible
     Scattered large hail events to 1.5 inches in diameter possible

   SUMMARY...Thunderstorm coverage is expected to increase over the
   next several hours. Environmental conditions support the potential
   for a few supercells capable of tornadoes, large hail 1" to 1.5" in
   diameter, and damaging gusts from 50 to 60 mph.

   The tornado watch area is approximately along and 90 statute miles
   east and west of a line from 25 miles south of Dayton OH to 40 miles
   north northeast of Findlay OH. For a complete depiction of the watch
   see the associated watch outline update (WOUS64 KWNS WOU2).

   PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...

   REMEMBER...A Tornado Watch means conditions are favorable for
   tornadoes and severe thunderstorms in and close to the watch
   area. Persons in these areas should be on the lookout for
   threatening weather conditions and listen for later statements
   and possible warnings.

   &&

   OTHER WATCH INFORMATION...CONTINUE...WW 121...

   AVIATION...Tornadoes and a few severe thunderstorms with hail
   surface and aloft to 1.5 inches. Extreme turbulence and surface wind
   gusts to 60 knots. A few cumulonimbi with maximum tops to 500. Mean
   storm motion vector 24030.

   ...Mosier

 

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1 minute ago, cperry29 said:

Yeah haven’t seen much publicity on this in OH. 🤷🏻‍♂️

My guess is because of the appearing conditional setup of the whole thing. HRRR basically shuts anything off south of 70, goes linear by the time it gets to the middle of the state. NAM3k stays more discrete and storms farther south. Odd to see such a disparity between the two so close and not reaching a somewhat similar solution. 

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2 minutes ago, ak9971 said:

My guess is because of the appearing conditional setup of the whole thing. HRRR basically shuts anything off south of 70, goes linear by the time it gets to the middle of the state. NAM3k stays more discrete and storms farther south. Odd to see such a disparity between the two so close and not reaching a somewhat similar solution. 

Both are far apart which is strange almost a nowcast situation south of Dayton.

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5 minutes ago, BuckeyeGal said:

The severe-warned by Troy has 1.25"-1.5" hail. 

And believe that as well nice hail spike extending from the storm briefly.

IMG_5641.thumb.jpeg.c86d707b4bd867b6f0cf33039799898b.jpeg

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