Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Cleveland, OH

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887
FXUS61 KCLE 031950
AFDCLE

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Cleveland OH
350 PM EDT Wed Jul 3 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
A cold front will cross the lake tonight and stall near the Ohio
River on Thursday. Low pressure will then develop west of the
Great Lakes on Friday and will lift the stalled front north as a
warm front. The low will extend a weak cold front across the lake
on Saturday afternoon, followed by high pressure by Sunday into
Monday.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/...
Main concern of the near term period will be over the next
several hours as a line of pre-frontal showers and thunderstorms
roughly along and east of the I-71 corridor continues to move
east. For the most part, this line remains sub-severe with the
exception of a more-dominant cell moving east across portions of
Summit/Portage counties. Damaging wind gusts will be the primary
threat with this cell. Otherwise, the most recent WOFS runs
suggest that strong winds will remain possible along and east
of the I-77 corridor through the rest of the afternoon
associated with this line, albeit remaining sub-severe,
generally 50 mph or less.

Given the unfavorable mid-levels and widespread cloud debris
behind this initial line of storms, not anticipating much
redevelopment along and ahead of the actual cold front,
currently located on a SW to NW axis just east of Chicago. This
should result in a relative lull in precipitation for much of
the area this evening and overnight as the weak cold front sags
east to southeast through the area and stalls just south of the
US-30 corridor.

For Thursday (July 4), we`ll be monitoring another decaying
convective complex across portions of IL/IN for any
redevelopment of showers and storms across our area in the
afternoon and evening hours. There remains a disparity between
hires models on precipitation placement for the 4th, and will be
dependent on where the cold front eventually settles/stalls
this evening and overnight. Confidence remains low on the cold
front placement on Thursday, though it appears precipitation
chances are more likely along and south of the US-30 corridor.
Temperatures on the 4th are expected to be seasonable, in the
mid-80s.

&&

.SHORT TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT/...
Low pressure system will be occluding as it tracks into the Great
Lakes Friday bringing the highest chances of showers and storms
through the day 2-7 forecast. Dewpoints into the lower 70s and
temperatures into the mid 80s will increase the SBCAPE to around
1500J/kg, combining with an increase in the low level winds ahead of
the cold front for a thunderstorm threat for the CWA. Also noting
significant drying above around 600mb with inverted V soundings
introduces a wind threat with the storms. Will be watching to see
how this unfolds in the upcoming forecasts and whether it all comes
together, or conversely, factors that could hinder the threat for
the day. Behind the cold front, cooler and drier airmass filters in,
knocking the dewpoints and temperatures down 5-10 degrees for
Saturday. Not much in the way of POPs for Saturday across the CWA,
but may need to add some in for the cold pool convective chances
with some lingering CAPE sandwiched above the boundary layer and
below around 750mb. Question will be if there is enough layer
humidity to produce precipitation.

&&

.LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
High pressure will be decaying as it moves through the Ohio Valley
region, but will keep the CWA dry through Monday. Flow aloft turns
southwesterly ahead of an upper level trough and an accompanying
surface low pressure system/cold front that will move in Tuesday.
This will become the next chances for showers and storms for the
region, and with winds turning southerly, temperatures will be
increasing through the long term forecast period.

&&

.AVIATION /18Z Wednesday THROUGH Monday/...
VFR across the TAF sites with primarily VFR to persist through
the TAF period. Main focus will be over the next several hours
as a line of showers and thunderstorms develops along the I-71
corridor and moves east, potentially impacting MFD/CAK/YNG with
brief IFR tsra conditions and gusty winds. Otherwise, have vcts
mention at CLE as the expectation is for storms to pass just
south of the site. Don`t anticipate much redevelopment along the
cold front later this evening. There is a low potential for
patchy fog to develop across some of the inland sites overnight
into early Thursday morning, though will be largely dependent on
areas that receive rain this afternoon/evening.

Winds are generally out of the southwest early this afternoon,
10 to 15 knots with gusts of 20 to 25 knots. Winds will diminish
to light and variable overnight, favoring a northwest to north
direction, around 5 knots, by Thursday morning behind a weak
cold front.

Outlook...Non-VFR possible in showers and thunderstorms on
Friday.

&&

.MARINE...
Southwest winds tonight become light and variable Thursday, then
southeasterly Thursday night with wave heights less than a foot
after tonight. Winds southerly Friday 10-15kts ahead of a cold
front capable of producing thunderstorms moving through west to
east, becoming southwesterly 15-20kts Friday night. Wave heights
increase to 1-3ft in the nearshore waters east of Cleveland, and 1-
3ft away from the immediate shoreline west through the islands to
Toledo. by Saturday morning. Winds ease out of the northwest Sunday
with waves 1-2ft.

&&

.CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
OH...None.
PA...None.
NY...None.
MARINE...None.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...Kahn
NEAR TERM...Kahn
SHORT TERM...26
LONG TERM...26
AVIATION...Kahn
MARINE...26/Sefcovic