Thanks Trey for this mini series on SkewTs, i have always had trouble trying to understand them but you made this so easy with your explanations and diagrams. Looking forward for the next step. Cheers Cliff
What's really helping is having the SPC Sounding page up for OKC and following along! Once I get it all figured out, checking the pop-up info on places like Windy will make a lot more sense. Thanks again! ps - Can't wait to get to the squiggles! lol Hodo! Hold the Door! ;-) Okay...now I'm just being silly.
8:30 so kind of like afternoons in the summertime in the south? We get alot of pop up showers and storms in the afternoons in the summer here where it's hard to predict what each day will bring especially in July and August! Also I was wondering next summer or something when it calms back down after the tornado season can you do a series on predicting winter weather and also more case studies please if you get the chance?
Yes, exactly! I'm not nearly as well-versed in winter weather forecasting as I am in severe weather forecasting, but I can give it a shot. I'm actually planning to do a brief video tomorrow on the upcoming winter storm in the Plains/Midwest. As for case studies, I have more on my list for sure!
@@ConvectiveChronicles not a problem!!! If you can't or don't want to do it that's perfectly ok! Just though I would ask! And yay I cannot wait! I hope you do one on the April 27 2011 and/or the April 28 2014 severe weather outbreak!
Been loving the series so far, can't wait to see the rest! I've been wondering where you managed to get that sounding you always show at the beginning of the video, what's the source for that specific type of skew-t plots? I think it's a really neat graph and would definitely be a nice addition to my bookmarks if I can pull other soundings from past events with that same plot!
Thanks so much; glad to hear you've enjoyed the series so far! I got that sounding from www2.mmm.ucar.edu/imagearchive/. Just plug in the date you want at the top right corner of the page, and then click on "Soundings". You can get soundings and other data for events dating back to 1996.
Is there a set of LI and SSI that there usually is a range, as in a set from -10 to 10 that makes them stick out more? I get that these are mire of an overview of general condition strength.
Thanks Trey for this mini series on SkewTs, i have always had trouble trying to understand them but you made this so easy with your explanations and diagrams. Looking forward for the next step. Cheers Cliff
Thanks so much; happy to hear that the series has been helpful so far!
mini! this is over 7 hours of information hahahaha
Wow man. You are a wonderful teacher. Seriously.
Thank you so much!
I'm learning more and more from this skew-Ts and hodographs. Thanks for the guidance on how to read them. Keep up the great work. 🙂👍
So glad to hear that; thanks so much!
Thank you. Going to Part 4
What's really helping is having the SPC Sounding page up for OKC and following along! Once I get it all figured out, checking the pop-up info on places like Windy will make a lot more sense.
Thanks again!
ps - Can't wait to get to the squiggles! lol
Hodo! Hold the Door! ;-) Okay...now I'm just being silly.
Thanks for breaking this all down to the level that a complete newb can still digest.
PS Go Sun Devils!!!!
Thank you! FORKS UP!
8:30 so kind of like afternoons in the summertime in the south? We get alot of pop up showers and storms in the afternoons in the summer here where it's hard to predict what each day will bring especially in July and August! Also I was wondering next summer or something when it calms back down after the tornado season can you do a series on predicting winter weather and also more case studies please if you get the chance?
Yes, exactly!
I'm not nearly as well-versed in winter weather forecasting as I am in severe weather forecasting, but I can give it a shot. I'm actually planning to do a brief video tomorrow on the upcoming winter storm in the Plains/Midwest. As for case studies, I have more on my list for sure!
@@ConvectiveChronicles not a problem!!! If you can't or don't want to do it that's perfectly ok! Just though I would ask! And yay I cannot wait! I hope you do one on the April 27 2011 and/or the April 28 2014 severe weather outbreak!
Been loving the series so far, can't wait to see the rest! I've been wondering where you managed to get that sounding you always show at the beginning of the video, what's the source for that specific type of skew-t plots? I think it's a really neat graph and would definitely be a nice addition to my bookmarks if I can pull other soundings from past events with that same plot!
Thanks so much; glad to hear you've enjoyed the series so far!
I got that sounding from www2.mmm.ucar.edu/imagearchive/. Just plug in the date you want at the top right corner of the page, and then click on "Soundings". You can get soundings and other data for events dating back to 1996.
On 3 C now.
Is there a set of LI and SSI that there usually is a range, as in a set from -10 to 10 that makes them stick out more? I get that these are mire of an overview of general condition strength.
For those, it's really just the more negative numbers...those are going to represent a more unstable atmosphere.
@@ConvectiveChronicles ok that makes a lot more sense than what I was thinking. Thank you for helping me out!
@@SgtShultzTO Any time! Thank you for watching!