TeamPlayersBlue wrote:Winds are back to pumping Gulf moisture into Texas again. Whipping up today. I do not like the looks of the soundings for SE Tx again. Be whether the upper air divergence makes it down here or not. CAPE levels are so high.
Yes the CAPE does look very high, the SPC just upgraded parts of East Texas and Central Louisiana to an enhanced risk...

Day 2 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1230 PM CDT Tue May 02 2017
Valid 031200Z - 041200Z
...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
EAST TEXAS...NORTH-CENTRAL LOUISIANA AND SOUTHWEST MISSISSIPPI...
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OUTSIDE OF THE
ENHANCED RISK AREA ACROSS PARTS OF EAST TEXAS...THE ARKLATEX AND
LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...
...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OUTSIDE OF THE
SLIGHT RISK AREA ACROSS PARTS OF EAST TEXAS...THE ARKLATEX AND LOWER
MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...
...SUMMARY...
Strong to severe thunderstorms will be possible from central/eastern
Texas to the central Gulf Coast Wednesday into Wednesday night. A
potential will exist for damaging wind gusts, isolated large hail
and a few tornadoes.
...East Texas/Louisiana/Southern Arkansas/Mississippi...
A positively-tilted upper-level trough is forecast to dig south
southeastward into the southern Plains on Wednesday as a 70 to 80 kt
mid-level jet moves into the base of the trough. At the surface, a
cold front is forecast to move southeastward across the southern
Plains as a warm front sets up from the Arklatex east southeastward
into the lower Mississippi Valley. Elevated thunderstorms appear
likely to be ongoing at the start of the period in eastern Oklahoma
near a surface low along the western edge of the low-level jet.
During the day, the low-level jet is forecast to develop southward
into the Sabine River valley. Warm advection associated with this
feature along with surface heating will help convection to develop
across the warm sector during the late morning and early afternoon.
Surface-based thunderstorms also appear likely to develop along a
warm front extending east-southeastward across north-central
Louisiana and along the cold front extending southwestward across
east Texas. During the late afternoon and early evening, a
squall-line is expected to organize and move east southeastward
across the slight risk area reaching the central Gulf Coast late in
the period.
Concerning Wednesday's scenario, the models present many different
scenarios but hint at the possibility of squall-line developing
during the event. It seems that early in the event before the
squall-line develops, storms will have a chance to remain discrete
as scattered cells initiate across the warm sector in east Texas and
Louisiana during the early to mid afternoon. NAM forecast soundings
across the warm sector at 21Z show a very moist environment with
surface dewpoints in the lower 70s F and MLCAPE values in the 2000
to 4000 J/kg range. In addition, wind profiles (0-6 km shear in the
45 to 50 kt range) along with 0-3 km storm relative helicities of
350 to 450 m2/s2, should support supercells with large hail and a
potential for tornadoes. The greatest tornado threat is forecast
along and just to the south of the warm front which should be
situated from near Tyler, Texas east-southeastward to near
Alexandria, Louisiana. An enhanced risk has been added along this
corridor to reflect a greater severe threat including a potential
for tornadoes. At this point, it remains unclear how long it will
take for the linear mode to become favored. The current thinking is
that a gradual transition from discrete to linear mode will take
place during the afternoon with a squall-line becoming organized by
late afternoon or early evening. After a squall-line becomes
organized, the favored severe threat will be for damaging wind gusts
although hail and brief tornadoes will be possible with rotating
cells embedded in the line. The squall-line should move across
southern Mississippi and southeastern Louisiana during the mid to
late evening.
..Broyles.. 05/02/2017