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Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Cleveland, OH
Issued by NWS Cleveland, OH
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286 FXUS61 KCLE 141928 AFDCLE Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Cleveland OH 328 PM EDT Sun Jul 14 2024 .SYNOPSIS... A frontal boundary will settle across the Great Lakes through Tuesday before pushing southeast across the area as a cold front Tuesday night into early Wednesday. High pressure will build in from the west Wednesday night through the end of the week. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT/... Scattered showers have developed across NE OH and NW PA and ahead of an MCS that is approaching the CWA from the west. The strongest convection associated with the MCS is following the instability gradient and will miss the local area to the southwest, but it`s possible that the developing convection to the north congeals into the line and scrapes southwestern zones that are currently in a Severe Thunderstorm Watch and a Slight Risk for severe weather. A boundary is currently lifting northeast across the watch area, which could serve as a focus for convergence and convective initiation as the MCS tracks eastward this afternoon into this evening. Additional scattered convection may develop through early this evening, as already evident in Lucas County. The big question is how widespread the convection will be and how much eastern locations destabilize over the next few hours - if destabilization occurs, there`s potential for more widespread and stronger thunderstorms since there will be boundaries in place. As of now, however, there is quite a bit of CIN and destabilization is struggling. Unfortunately, CAMs are not handling the current situation well, so will need to rely heavily on mesoanalysis, radar, and satellite trends and adjust the forecast as necessary. While the best instability will be in western zones, there will be sufficient buoyancy and moisture for damaging winds and heavy downpours within any thunderstorms that develop. Shear is a bit marginal (20-30 knots) but there is just enough for a low-end tornado and hail threat. It`s safe to say that the forecast for overnight and through the remainder of the near term period also remains uncertain and will depend on how things shake out this afternoon and evening. Another MCS will likely approach the area from the northwest late tonight into early Monday morning with another round of convection possible Monday night. How much each line holds together as it crosses into the CWA will depend on instability and any boundaries left behind from previous storms. Can`t rule out strong to severe thunderstorms and heavy rainfall with any storms through Monday night. A Marginal Risk for severe weather is in place for the entire area Monday with a Slight Risk clipping the I-75 corridor. It will be quite warm and humid throughout the period, although maximum temps Monday will depend on cloud cover and precipitation. Highs may reach the upper 80s to lower 90s with dew points in the low to mid 70s expected. Heat indices may very briefly touch 100 degrees, but not confident enough to do a heat headline since any cloud cover or showers/storms will result in cooler temps/heat indices. Overnight lows will be in the lower 70s each night. && .SHORT TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/... Active weather pattern will continue to impact the area through the short term period as a northwest flow pattern remains established with areas of shortwave upper level energy advecting along the broad upper level trough. Initially Tuesday morning, remnants of an overnight MCS may continue to bring showers and thunderstorms to the area, although with limited instability at that time, right now only expecting some gusty winds and heavy rainfall. As stated a plethora of times in previous discussions, there is a potential for this forecast to change/evolve and will be highly dependent on how mesoscale features develop upstream and the strength of the system when it arrives to northern Ohio. By Tuesday afternoon, a cold front will approach the area from the northwest with stronger synoptic forcing arriving as well. A mid- level shortwave and LLJ of 40-50 knots will act to enhance storm development. High instability, increasing shear, and a very moist airmass with dewpoints in the 70s will aid in enhancement from the mesoscale aspect, especially by mid to late afternoon ahead of the front. In addition to the potential for storm development, PWAT values in excess of 2", deep warm cloud layers, and nearly parallel storm motion to the boundary will create very heavy and efficient rainfall. This may lead to localized flooding concerns, especially in urban areas and where training storms develop. Maintained the heavy rain wording for the forecast on Tuesday and Tuesday night to account for this threat. To highlight these risks on Tuesday and into Tuesday night, SPC has issued a Day 3 Marginal Risk for severe weather with strong, damaging winds the greatest threat. WPC has issued a Slight Risk ERO for the entire area. Late Tuesday into Wednesday, models suggest the cold front moving across the area will begin to slow. Uncertainty in how much it will slow and overall timing remains, so opted to increase PoPs across the eastern tier of counties throughout the day on Wednesday. Giving the weakened environment, not thinking much will remain severe, but opted to maintain chance thunder at this time. Overnight on Wednesday, the front should settle to the southeast of the area, allowing high pressure to build in, breaking the active weather trend and allowing for dry conditions to return. Temperatures on Tuesday will be quite warm and muggy with highs climbing into the upper 80s to low 90s with dewpoints in the 70s. This will result in heat index values climbing into the mid to upper 90s. As the front slow meanders southeast, overnight temperatures on Tuesday night will be a bit milder in the northwestern counties, dropping into the mid 60s, but elsewhere they will likely only fall into the upper 60s to low 70s again. A cool off is expected Wednesday when highs only climb into the low 80s during the day and lows fall into the upper 50s to low 60s overnight. && .LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... For the entire long term period, high pressure will be the dominant driving force of weather across the region, resulting in another prolonged period without rainfall with cooler temperatures. Highs on Thursday and Friday will only climb into the upper 70s to low 80s, before warming back into the mid to upper 80s for this weekend. && .AVIATION /18Z Sunday THROUGH Friday/... Quite a tricky TAF forecast with potential for several rounds of convection possible through 18Z Monday. The main area of concern is associated with an MCS currently within the vicinity of KFDY, however the strongest activity within that complex will likely miss the forecast area to the southwest. However, scattered showers and thunderstorms may develop across the entire area this afternoon into this evening. There`s still some uncertainty in how much the atmosphere destabilizes this afternoon, especially as the boundary associated with the MCS moves through the area, which will affect the coverage and placement of thunderstorms through this evening. Have showers and thunderstorms at terminals where confidence in shower/thunderstorm chances is highest with VCSH/VCTS elsewhere (there will likely be amendments as the afternoon unfolds). There will likely be a lull in shower and thunderstorm activity later this evening before another MCS approaches from the northwest overnight. There`s a decent chance of more widespread showers, but any thunderstorm potential will depend on recovery and any boundaries left over by earlier convection. To sum things up, there will be multiple opportunities for convection over the next 24 hours and the forecast will be driven by mesoscale features that have yet to materialize. Any showers/thunderstorms that move directly over terminals could produce torrential rainfall resulting non-VFR conditions and brief erratic, gusty winds. Amendments will most likely be needed throughout the period as confidence increases. Outside of thunderstorms, expect VFR conditions and winds out of the south/southwest at 6 to 12 knots. Outlook...Mainly VFR outside of occasional thunderstorms through Tuesday evening. && .MARINE... Southwest flow of 10-15 knots is expected to persist through Tuesday. Winds may occasionally approach 20 knots on Tuesday as a cold front approaches from the east. Timing of the onset of these winds remains uncertain given the overall uncertainty with the progression of the system the next few days. With that being said, cannot rule out a potential short fused Small Craft Advisory being needed for Tuesday. Late Tuesday into Wednesday, a cold front will move south of the lake, shifting winds to west-northwest at 5-10 knots behind the boundary as high pressure builds east. These winds will persist through at least Friday before becoming more northeasterly this weekend. It is worth noting the potential for multiple rounds of strong to severe storms today through Tuesday. Where these storms do develop, strong, damaging wind gusts are the primary threat. In areas impacted by these storms, winds and waves may locally increase and briefly cause hazardous marine conditions. && .CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OH...None. PA...None. NY...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Maines NEAR TERM...Maines SHORT TERM...Campbell LONG TERM...Campbell AVIATION...Maines MARINE...Campbell