Storms Escalate from Afternoon to Nighttime Peak (Image Credits: Unsplash)
North Texas residents should prepare for severe thunderstorms building across the Dallas-Fort Worth area late Tuesday, March 10, carrying risks of baseball-sized hail, gusts exceeding 70 mph and isolated tornadoes.[1][2]
Storms Escalate from Afternoon to Nighttime Peak
Destructive hail capable of shattering windshields headlines the forecast as isolated strong thunderstorms spark in Central Texas during the afternoon.[1] These initial cells could intensify quickly, paving the way for more widespread development spreading from west to east tonight. Meteorologists note the primary window of concern ramps up after 4 p.m., peaking between 8 p.m. and midnight.[3]
A final push of storms arrives Wednesday, though less intense with quarter- to half-dollar hail and damaging gusts remaining possible. Heavy rainfall accompanies the activity, heightening localized flooding concerns in urban zones. Officials urge multiple alert methods before bedtime.[2]
Primary Hazards at a Glance
All severe weather modes threaten the metroplex, from supercell hail cores to potential spin-ups. Damaging winds top 70 mph in stronger updrafts, capable of downing trees and power lines. Flash flooding emerges where storms train over saturated ground from prior rains.
- Hail: Destructive sizes greater than baseballs, up to egg-sized in core areas.[1]
- Winds: Sustained gusts over 70 mph, with isolated 75 mph bursts possible.[4]
- Tornadoes: Low but nonzero risk for a few brief twisters, especially overnight.[2]
- Flooding: Heavy downpours spark rapid rises in creeks and low spots.[5]
Echoes of Weekend Deluges
North Texas already endured intense storms over the weekend, complete with large hail, widespread flooding and a Tornado Watch that spanned multiple counties until early cancellation.[6] High-water rescues dotted highways, while hail up to 2 inches pummeled vehicles. Power outages rippled through neighborhoods as winds battered infrastructure…