#764 Postby weatherdude1108 » Thu Apr 27, 2017 4:20 pm 
			
			
			
			EWX discussion.  We're going bowling Saturday evening with some friends from 5:30 to 8:30pm.  Hopefully the storms can hold off until after that time.
    
Area Forecast Discussion
 National Weather Service Austin/San Antonio TX
 245 PM CDT Thu Apr 27 2017
 .SHORT TERM (Tonight through Friday Night)...
 Low level moisture will return tonight with stratus developing
 overnight. Friday morning lows will be around 15-20 degrees warmer in
 some areas compared to this morning. Low level moisture will continue
 to increase Friday and Friday night beneath a strengthening cap and a
 few isolated showers may be possible Friday night into Saturday
 morning. Breaks in the cloud cover Friday afternoon should allow 
 temperatures to climb into the low 90s across the east and mid 90s 
 across the south and west. Combined with increasing dew points this 
 should put heat index values into the upper 90s across the region 
 tomorrow afternoon.
 &&
 .LONG TERM (Saturday through Thursday)...
 An upper level low through the short term will develop near the Four
 Corners and Southern Rockies and by Saturday morning be located 
 across New Mexico. A lead shortwave in the southwest flow aloft will
 move through eastern areas of the CWA during the day on Saturday. 
 The main question will be how quickly the cap erodes during the day
 on Saturday, if it completely erode at all. As has been the case 
 much of the Spring, GFS forecast soundings at AUS and SAT indicate a 
 much faster erosion of the cap than does the ECMWF, Canadian and 
 NAM12 and as such develops isolated/scattered convection near and 
 east of I-35 Saturday afternoon. Am leaning towards a slightly 
 stronger cap as the rest of the model soundings indicate and slower 
 erosion during the day on Saturday, awaiting for the main forcing 
 Saturday night. However, if a storm were to develop MUCAPE values of
 3000-3500 J/KG combined with 0-6km shear values of 40-50 kts could 
 yield an isolated strong to severe storm Saturday afternoon.
 As mentioned the main forcing in the base of the upper level low 
 moving into Texas will eventually lead to better chances of storms as
 the associated cold front catches up with the dry line over the CWA 
 early Saturday evening. This should help convection overcome what is 
 left of the weakening cap through portions of the Hill Country and
 I-35 corridor between 00Z-03Z Saturday evening. Eventually storms 
 could organize into a broken line as the front progresses east of 
 I-35 late Saturday evening and into the overnight. Given the 
 aforementioned MUCAPE and increasing 0-6km shear values over the 
 region, there will be a risk for some storms Saturday night to be 
 severe across portions of the Hill Country and along and east of 
 I-35. The main threats at this time appear to large hail initially, 
 transitioning to damaging straight-line winds east of I-35 should a 
 line develop. 0-1km and 0-3km shear will be low and does not align 
 well with the most unstable area, therefore the potential for 
 tornadoes associated with this activity appears low at this time. 
 While pockets of heavy rain may occur, the progressive nature of the 
 front will sweep the entire system through quickly by Sunday morning 
 limiting the potential for a widespread flash flood threat. Overall 
 rainfall totals 1/4 to 1 inch will be common across central and 
 eastern areas, with pockets up to 2 inches possible.
 Clearing with windy northwest winds developing during the day on
 Sunday. This could lead to elevated to near critical fire weather
 conditions Sunday afternoon across western areas that do not receive
 much rain with this system.
 Below normal lows will occur again on Monday morning behind the
 front, with lows into the upper 40s and low 50s in many areas. A
 warming trend will take place Monday afternoon through Wednesday. 
 Another potential upper level system and surface cold front looks to
 possibly impact the area Wednesday and Wednesday night. There is
 currently a large spread between the ECMWF and GFS on timing of this
 cold front.
			
									
						
		0 likes   
			The preceding post is NOT an official forecast, and should not be used as such. It is only the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. It is NOT endorsed by any professional institution including storm2k.org.  For Official Information please refer to the NHC and NWS products.