In 2016 and 2017, CLAMPS-2 was deployed in the pre-convective and near-storm environment for 12 severe weather events to support the mini-MPEX field program. The impacts from assimilating AERI retrievals of temperature and water vapor and the DWL retrievals of the horizontal wind (derived from a VAD technique) within an ensemble of convection-allowing model forecasts of thunderstorms (emulating the NCAR realtime ensemble) will be presented. The CLAMPS-2 observations were guided by real-time ensemble sensitivity analysis (ESA) to increase the likelihood that observations were obtained in regions of the environment that impact later forecasts of thunderstorms. The retrievals (along with routine observations, including reflectivity and radial velocity from nearby WSR-88Ds) are assimilated simultaneously on a 15-km grid and a nested 3-km grid using the WRF-DART assimilation system and is driven by initial conditions from the continuously-cycled ensemble analyses produced by the NCAR ensemble. These ensemble analyses are used to initialize an ensemble of 6-h forecasts on the 3-km grid. Changes to these forecasts with and without the targeted AERI and DWL observations over 12 days will be presented. Results indicate substantial impacts are made to the boundary layer state that improve the positioning of thunderstorms for many hours into the forecasts on multiple days. The aggregate impacts across all 12 cases will be presented at the conference.