Another strong system is moving into the Southern Plains and bringing
with it chances for severe weather, including damaging winds, large
hail, and strong tornadoes. There will also be a threat for extreme
fire danger in the Texas Panhandle region into West Oklahoma behind
the dryline.
The main question remains the timing of this event. The warm sector
will remain capped throughout much of the day; however it appears that
a corridor of CAPE values around 1000-1250 j/kg may be sufficient to
break the cap before sundown. In this event, there is a threat for
isolated tornadoes and very large hail, especially on storms that form
early, as they will likely remain isolated until a short time after
sundown. The system is then expected to expand in coverage and likely
quickly evolve into a QLCS type system,much like Thursday night's event.
There will then be a threat for mostly widespread damaging winds, however
a tornado threat should exist well into the night with any semi-discrete
or embedded supercells in the line. This could once again be a very
dangerous evening/night for parts of the Southern Plains and Mid-
Mississippi River Valley into Dixie Alley.