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Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Greer, SC
Issued by NWS Greer, SC
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499 FXUS62 KGSP 170525 AFDGSP Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Greenville-Spartanburg SC 125 AM EDT Wed Jul 17 2024 .SYNOPSIS... Hot high pressure lingers above the region through Wednesday. A pattern change begins to evolve by Thursday, as a cold front will approach from the northwest then become stationary across our region for several days. This will keep shower and thunderstorm chances elevated through early next week. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TODAY/... As of 1230 AM EDT Wednesday: Remnants of ongoing convection continues to diminish, leaving behind a cluster of showers in the NC Piedmont. Expecting the shower activity to be gone in the next hour or so. Satellite shows some widespread cloud debris from decayed storms, which could linger the next few hours. No other adjustments were made as the forecast is on track. Overnight, the atmosphere becomes rather quiet after 02Z with perhaps a few lingering showers over the ern zones thru 06Z. The sfc layer remains a little mixed and with debris clouds hanging around, dont expect much of a fog threat. A wavy pre-frontal trof will push into the forecast area Wed afternoon and likely produce more widespread storm activity across the mtns and foothills. In fact, increasing shear may allow for some storm organization and cold pool lines across the nrn foothills and Northwest Piedmont. Highs Wed will reach a cat abv normal with td/s mixing out into the u60s to l70s. Heat index values dont look to reach adv criteria, but will come close across the I-77 corridor and will be reassessed on the midnight shift for any possible product. && .SHORT TERM /TONIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY/... As of 200 PM EDT Tuesday: Height falls and an encroaching frontal boundary from the northwest will be imminent as a digging upper trough swings across the eastern half of the CONUS. Diurnal instability and PWAT values on the order of ~2.00" will set the stage for widespread convection across the area through much of the forecast period, with an emphasis on coverage during the afternoon and evening, but expect for lingering convection during the nighttime period as well. Expect the primary threat to be excessive rainfall as convective rainfall rates combined with the potential for training cells along the boundary as model guidance indicate that the boundary should sag far enough south to hang out in the CFWA by late Wednesday into Thursday and becomes quasi-stationary from that point on. Storm coverage for Thursday could be in question, mainly across the mountain zones and I-40 corridor points north as the front may end up into the far southern tier of the CFWA and allow for the continental high to filter in drier air and thus, limit convective coverage. On the other side, this would allow for convective coverage to become widespread across the Piedmont zones, especially in CLT Metro, Upstate, and northeast Georgia through Thursday, before the front sinks south of the CFWA Thursday night. Heat indices will rise into the 90s for one more day on Thursday, but definitely not as sweltering and should bring a nice relief from the heat. Extensive cloud cover and elevated PoPs will keep temperatures at bay as afternoon highs for Thursday will be near-normal, while values drop to ~5 degrees below normal on Friday. The frontal boundary seems like it`s going to wobble back and forth across the CFWA and open up the door for another round of convection Friday. Although the rain won`t be drought busting, it will provide some relief even thought conditions will remain very warm and muggy. && .LONG TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY/... As of 230 PM EDT Tuesday: The upper trough from the short term is shown being absorbed by the subtropical jet as the deep layer flow will steadily come out of the southwest. As a result, high PWAT values will remain in place as the quasi-stationary front stays activated as guidance try to spin up an upper low over the south-central CONUS. In this case, the pattern is likely to be convectively active through the period, with a diurnal emphasis. This will prolong an excessive rainfall threat through the forecast period, but could become heightened in localized areas, especially in locations that are prone to flooding. Otherwise, temperatures will be at or slightly below normal through much of the medium range as extensive cloud cover and elevated PoPs continue through early next week. && .AVIATION /06Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... At KCLT and elsewhere: Prevailing VFR conditions for the TAF period. Given the previous rainfall, mountain terminals could see BR or FG overnight. Currently, KAVL is already gone down in cigs. A TEMPO for LIFR will be in effect until 10z, with improvement after that. Calm and quiet weather for the morning hours until the afternoon. Another round of possible convection is slated during peak heating once again. Confidence is moderate for showers and TSRA, so a PROB30 at all terminals. Will likely change to TEMPOs at the next issuance. Winds should prevail SW outside KAVL, which will toggle N/S, but all sites will have light winds. Outlook: Morning fog/low stratus possible each morning, especially across the mountain valleys and for areas that received heavy rainfall the day prior. && .GSP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... GA...None. NC...None. SC...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...DEO NEAR TERM...CP/PM/SBK SHORT TERM...CAC LONG TERM...CAC AVIATION...CP