David and Jimmy
You have captured some very impressive lightning strikes from a distance.
Because I have had such a poor season, I decided after work to drive right up to the base of the storm, drove underneath it and parked the car. I was at Mona Park (Chisholm Road Auburn). I made sure that I was underneath the darkest part of the cloud.
Before I left work at 4.50 pm, I noted the temperature where I was:-
Homebush - 32C
Due Points - 15C
Humidity - Rising to around 56%
While I did not have my video camera with me I had my SLR camera and took a photo just before it became far too dangerous for me to get out of the car.
All those lightning strikes you were filming and recording were actually hitting objects very close to me. Not to understate this, I received no less than 7 explosive or major thunderclaps in a row.
One lightning flash about 100 - 150 metres away to my west made the car shake and set the car alarm off. It did something to the car alarm.
Oh, I then watched 2 women and 2 girls walk past my Council car all carrying steel umbrellas. I thought that this was so stupid especially since the storm was producing staccato lightning in the locality where I was. I trained my camera on them thinking that I would actually witness a lightning strike fatality but they were so lucky. Even another massive strike near me did not deter them and they wandered off.
Later that night (Between 8 and 8.30 pm), I took some video film of that south western thunderstorm and captured some lovely lightning flashes before the lightning ceased. So I am pleased to have seen at last, a storm and filmed some lightning.
It was interesting to see how that first storm developed. In particular, they started off as a line of cumulus towers over the Blue Mountains. After enlarging, I noted significant weakening then the cell that produced the lightning that you filmed developed at the rear of that first line. Yes it was high based.
The storm produced large raindrops where I was but no hail.
The thunderstorm cell weakened further east and I agree with Jimmy, it was a pulse storm, one of many that had life spans of say 30 minutes to 1 hour.
I also noted the top temperature range for the day for Sydney, eg
Manly 22C
Sydney Harbour 21.8C
Observatory Hill 28C
Homebush 36C
Parramatta 37.5C
Blacktown 39C
Liverpool 39C
Penrith 40.3C
The storms formed over western Sydney in an area that had received significant daytime heating but weakened by the time they reached the coast. I think the sea breeze effect may have had something to do with that. There was certainly a significant temperature gradient across Sydney and no doubt this influenced what happened. Yet humidity levels on the coast was 57% before 3 pm but just 14% at Penrith but yet these storms formed in a region of lower humidity but higher temperature. Given the fact that I was watching some of the dynamics of what was going on, I was able to note this wide contrast and variation. This is something that I have never noted before.
Harley Pearman