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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
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The Random Weather Thread
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<blockquote data-quote="L8APEX" data-source="post: 16776780" data-attributes="member: 51947"><p>Still need to finish my video. Traveled in a 1/4 backward C shape until passing the turnpike. then shot off NE at the same heading until it lifted 2mi east of Benton The track was within 7-7.4mi from 21st and Rock like you took a protractor and started at 145* and drew a line with a protractor to 90* then it kept the same NE heading until it lifted 2mi east of Benton. So 5-4'oclock to 3, before going off NE. </p><p>It was a super high base, and a "left flank split/ left mover" after the initial cell split (splitting storm), in which the "left mover" usually rotates very fast cyclonically (counterclockwise) as it breaks free, right side goes anticyclonic (clockwise) which gives that left cell a twirl as it breaks off. Part of why we went from a rotating wall cloud to tornado on the ground in less than 50 seconds. </p><p>On radar it was clear air until it started getting some debris and showed as a red dot a few miles behind the cell. Here is a radar shot from about 8:23 and you can see the tornado over the turnpike, with debris falling around, behind it casung the other returns. Spotters were calling in Tornado on the ground doing damage by 8:11:30pm before the warning was issued, typically we get ~15mins. </p><p>Still can't believe with no warning (aside a watch which was very uneventful most of the day due to a very strong cap) and moving at 60mph through dense population as a very strong multiple vorticity EF3 it only injured a few people and somehow no deaths.</p><p></p><p>I was getting crap together as the cold front was meeting the dryline and causing many areas of rotations even producing a few smaller tornadoes on the leeding edge. They would be nearly ontop of me at night, in precipitation. Thankfully they were all in the open.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="L8APEX, post: 16776780, member: 51947"] Still need to finish my video. Traveled in a 1/4 backward C shape until passing the turnpike. then shot off NE at the same heading until it lifted 2mi east of Benton The track was within 7-7.4mi from 21st and Rock like you took a protractor and started at 145* and drew a line with a protractor to 90* then it kept the same NE heading until it lifted 2mi east of Benton. So 5-4'oclock to 3, before going off NE. It was a super high base, and a "left flank split/ left mover" after the initial cell split (splitting storm), in which the "left mover" usually rotates very fast cyclonically (counterclockwise) as it breaks free, right side goes anticyclonic (clockwise) which gives that left cell a twirl as it breaks off. Part of why we went from a rotating wall cloud to tornado on the ground in less than 50 seconds. On radar it was clear air until it started getting some debris and showed as a red dot a few miles behind the cell. Here is a radar shot from about 8:23 and you can see the tornado over the turnpike, with debris falling around, behind it casung the other returns. Spotters were calling in Tornado on the ground doing damage by 8:11:30pm before the warning was issued, typically we get ~15mins. Still can't believe with no warning (aside a watch which was very uneventful most of the day due to a very strong cap) and moving at 60mph through dense population as a very strong multiple vorticity EF3 it only injured a few people and somehow no deaths. I was getting crap together as the cold front was meeting the dryline and causing many areas of rotations even producing a few smaller tornadoes on the leeding edge. They would be nearly ontop of me at night, in precipitation. Thankfully they were all in the open. [/QUOTE]
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