YES! I’ve been waiting to see a case study done on this event. One of the most prolific cyclic supercells of all time and extremely highly documented by hundreds of chasers. Can’t wait to watch the video!
Another great video! Your fluency in going through the isotherm and isobar data impresses me to no end. I struggle immensely with them and would never have guessed the significance of those small perturbations you pointed out. Thanks again for the great content.
Thanks so much! It took awhile for me to become confident enough to do this kind of analysis; thankfully, I had a great professor during my undergrad studies who gave us lots and lots of practice on contour analysis. I actually have a new series planned that is going to cover weather map analysis in depth; keep an eye out for that soon. Thank you again!
I’ve watched just about every discussion you’ve ever put out, but somehow this one slipped me! Thank goodness for Twitter so I saw your tweet! As always, great info and analysis and I can’t wait to finish out the vid!
Just wanted to drop a comment saying how much I enjoy this content. This is amazing as always and I very much look forward to more case studies. If you every do a case study on 4/27/2011 it might just be the best video on the internet.
One day you should analyze the largest tornado outbreak in Minnesota, the June 17th, 2010 outbreak. I believe that year, Minnesota had the most tornadoes of any state!
Really interesting and insightful meteorological analysis Trey, incredible footage too! Looked like one hell of a spectacular day! Thoroughly enjoy these videos
I'm surprised I never threw a comment on this video but it's still one of the more impressive cyclical tornadic supercells that you'll ever see. It may have not been on the level like the Greensburg cyclical supercell in terms of strength of the tornado but man just by sheer number is wild. The sheer number this thing produced is something like a chasers dreams. Hell if you caught 10 of these you may have gotten more tornadoes some chasers might see over 2-5 years TOTAL. Wild stuff.
The radar image at 35:45 is spectacular. Also note the multiple streets streaming in from the SSE. Based on Orf’s computer simulations I think this is significant
Nice background shot!! This must have been a real extraordinary time for you, Trey. Really love the "Case Studies" as there is always a plethora of educational content to get, although I will have to take in small chunks. Continually learning from your excellent teaching and take care!!
Watched your forecast the day after. Overall you called it right. Storm reports show SW KS popped 2 tornadoes, which didn't seem to get much attention in forecasts and targeting. What favored that development?
It wouldn’t necessarily show up in the sounding; you might see a little bit more backed surface winds than can enhance the low level shear. The surface low can enhance the severe wx ingredients (lift, shear, etc.) ahead of it and is often a favored location for tornadic supercells.
Wanted to callout a slight mistake at 36:46, the tornado being stated as the initial tornado is actually a different tornado. The first tornado roped out to its west. I could be wrong though, great video regardless 👍.
Great video! By the way this is kpopmultistan Miranda that's been here a while now if you remember me lol I just changed my channel name to hopefully help my channel grow
@@ConvectiveChronicles for sure I've seen a lot so far. Just a pet peeve of mine, so don't give it much weight. I appreciate your content though and learning a lot from you
YES! I’ve been waiting to see a case study done on this event. One of the most prolific cyclic supercells of all time and extremely highly documented by hundreds of chasers. Can’t wait to watch the video!
Enjoy!
Another great video! Your fluency in going through the isotherm and isobar data impresses me to no end. I struggle immensely with them and would never have guessed the significance of those small perturbations you pointed out. Thanks again for the great content.
Thanks so much! It took awhile for me to become confident enough to do this kind of analysis; thankfully, I had a great professor during my undergrad studies who gave us lots and lots of practice on contour analysis. I actually have a new series planned that is going to cover weather map analysis in depth; keep an eye out for that soon. Thank you again!
@@ConvectiveChronicles Oh my!!! Fantastic!!
I’ve watched just about every discussion you’ve ever put out, but somehow this one slipped me! Thank goodness for Twitter so I saw your tweet! As always, great info and analysis and I can’t wait to finish out the vid!
Thank you so much!
Absolutely loving these past setup case studies! Would love to see a case study on 5/24/11 one of these days. Keep up the good work!
Thanks so much! I will add it to the list!
Just wanted to drop a comment saying how much I enjoy this content. This is amazing as always and I very much look forward to more case studies. If you every do a case study on 4/27/2011 it might just be the best video on the internet.
Thanks so much! Stay tuned, a 4-27-11 case study is coming up very soon…
One day you should analyze the largest tornado outbreak in Minnesota, the June 17th, 2010 outbreak. I believe that year, Minnesota had the most tornadoes of any state!
It’s on my list!
Really interesting and insightful meteorological analysis Trey, incredible footage too! Looked like one hell of a spectacular day! Thoroughly enjoy these videos
Thanks so much, Rhi!
Wow. Trey your presentation was just spectacular, blending all the pertinent information with the stunning photos and radar. Awesome, no less.
Thank you very much!
These analyses make fantastic content. I am learning so much. thank you.
Thank you so much!
I'm surprised I never threw a comment on this video but it's still one of the more impressive cyclical tornadic supercells that you'll ever see.
It may have not been on the level like the Greensburg cyclical supercell in terms of strength of the tornado but man just by sheer number is wild. The sheer number this thing produced is something like a chasers dreams. Hell if you caught 10 of these you may have gotten more tornadoes some chasers might see over 2-5 years TOTAL. Wild stuff.
The radar image at 35:45 is spectacular. Also note the multiple streets streaming in from the SSE. Based on Orf’s computer simulations I think this is significant
Nice background shot!! This must have been a real extraordinary time for you, Trey. Really love the "Case Studies" as there is always a plethora of educational content to get, although I will have to take in small chunks. Continually learning from your excellent teaching and take care!!
Thanks so much, Tal! This was definitely one of my top chase experiences yet!
That radar image at 34:27 is indeed mindblowing. Thanks for the video, I’ve learned a lot.
Thank you! Happy to hear you found the video helpful!
Watched your forecast the day after. Overall you called it right. Storm reports show SW KS popped 2 tornadoes, which didn't seem to get much attention in forecasts and targeting. What favored that development?
I think the proximity to the surface low helped add some extra oomph to the storms up in KS, despite relatively cold temps and meager dew points.
@@ConvectiveChronicles Nothing like some extra oomph. Where would I find that in the sounding?
It wouldn’t necessarily show up in the sounding; you might see a little bit more backed surface winds than can enhance the low level shear. The surface low can enhance the severe wx ingredients (lift, shear, etc.) ahead of it and is often a favored location for tornadic supercells.
These case studies are so helpful with studying meteorology at OU!
Very happy to hear that; thank you!
Wanted to callout a slight mistake at 36:46, the tornado being stated as the initial tornado is actually a different tornado. The first tornado roped out to its west. I could be wrong though, great video regardless 👍.
Thank you; that tornado was indeed the first tornado of the event.
Hey tre, old video so I know you may not respond, but is there a good website to find air sounding archives? The NOAA website only has like 7 days.
Here are a couple sites to find archived observed soundings:
vortex.plymouth.edu/myowxp/upa/raobplt-a.html
weather.uwyo.edu/upperair/sounding.html
@@ConvectiveChronicles thank you sir
Great video, miss you❤️
Thank you sir; miss y’all too…can’t wait to be back
Excellent Video
Thank you!
Awesome video. 👍🙂
Thank you!
Great video! By the way this is kpopmultistan Miranda that's been here a while now if you remember me lol I just changed my channel name to hopefully help my channel grow
Thank you, and thanks for the heads up on the name change! I always appreciate your support!
Love your videos, but the mouth smacking noises seemed more excessive than usual in this case study lol
They've gotten better since this one
@@ConvectiveChronicles for sure I've seen a lot so far. Just a pet peeve of mine, so don't give it much weight. I appreciate your content though and learning a lot from you
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