Large hail, a couple tornadoes, and wind damage will be possible this evening across parts of northwestern, north-central and central Kansas this evening. Very large hail over 2 inches in diameter, damaging winds to 70 mph, and a few tornadoes will be possible this evening and tonight from northwest Texas into central Oklahoma.
Severe thunderstorms appear likely on Friday from parts of eastern Nebraska/northeast Kansas into northwest Missouri and Iowa, and continuing southward into parts of the southern Plains and Ozarks. Tornadoes (some strong), large to very large hail, and damaging winds will all be possible.
Potentially widespread strong to severe thunderstorms are expected Saturday into Saturday night. The greatest threat is currently anticipated across parts of the central and southern Plains, where very large hail, damaging winds, and a few strong tornadoes will be possible. A larger area of potential threat will extend from south-central Texas north-northeastward into the Great Lakes.
On My Future Radar,
you can see the future.
Or at least, what the weather forecast models
think
the future will be.
You are on the page that displays data from the
NAM Hires forecast model.
Currently, we have radar imagery for this model from now until
.
About My Future Radar
My Future Radar uses data from the
Rapid Refresh
and the
NAM
forecast models to provide simulated future radar imagery.
The Rapid Refresh model is run hourly and is useful for short term
forecasting. The North American Mesoscale Forecast System (NAM) is run 4
times a day and typically has data from now to 2.5 days in the future.