National Weather Service Text Product
AFOS product AFDCLE
Dates interpreted at 00:00 UTCDisplaying AFOS PIL: AFDCLE
Product Timestamp: 2019-08-20 19:58 UTC
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941 FXUS61 KCLE 201958 AFDCLE Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Cleveland OH 358 PM EDT Tue Aug 20 2019 .SYNOPSIS... A cold front will move southeast across the local area Wednesday evening. A ridge of high pressure will build southeast across the area Thursday. High pressure will be centered over the local area Friday night. Below average temperatures are expected for the end of the week and weekend. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/... Focus of the near term forecast is thunderstorm potential this afternoon evening, as thunderstorms begin to develop in west central Ohio ahead of a long lived but somewhat decaying MCS tracking through Indiana. Surface destabilization has continued through the afternoon across the local area, with 2-3k j/kg MLCAPE centered across western Ohio. Mid level lapse rates steepen ahead of the MCS, which will influence the area in the next several hours. Shear remains marginal, with effective bulk shear values of 20-25 kts across the area through early evening, which should limit overall organization of storm activity. However, dry air above 700mb and resultant DCAPE values of 1000-1300 j/kg across the area, coupled with steep low level lapse rates, will enhance the risk for damaging winds with the stronger thunderstorms across the area. SPC has expanded the Day 1 slight risk northward into the southwest part of the forecast area, with a marginal risk for the rest of the area. The best severe thunderstorm potential will be from 4 PM through 10 PM across the area. The associated MCV will slowly shear out/weaken across the area this evening and push east of the area by Wednesday morning. Precip chances will be on the downtrend after midnight, but held onto chance pops east/slight chance pops elsewhere with the disturbance across the area and ample boundary layer moisture and perhaps residual outflow boundaries as a focus of surface forcing. A synoptic cold front will slowly sink south towards the area Wednesday and into the area Wednesday night. Surface forcing is marginal with the boundary, and weak destabilization may limit widespread precipitation development across the area during the day, especially with the better mid level forcing displaced north and southwest of the area. Have kept pops in the chance range on Wednesday, with MLCAPE values up to 1000 j/kg as much drier air in the 850-700mb layer moves into the area from the north. High temperatures rise into the mid/upper 80s across the area. Forecast pops diminish to slight chance range Wednesday night as the front slides south across the area, with the loss of daytime heating inhibiting much fuel for precip development. Pops may linger across the south and southwest parts of the forecast area after midnight into early Thursday morning as upstream convectively induced disturbances propagate eastward along the front, although much of the guidance favors precip placement just south of the area. && .SHORT TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/... Weak cold front will start off across our southern counties on Thursday. A deepening upper level trough will push south across Lake Michigan on Thursday, maintaining a southwest flow aloft. This may delay the southward movement of the front and will hold onto a low chance of showers and possibly a thunderstorm across the south on Thursday. A noticeable change in airmass will be felt with highs dropping below normal into the 70s where they will remain heading into the weekend. High pressure will strengthen across the Great Lakes Thursday night into Friday, finally pushing the front south of the area. && .LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/... Upper level trough shifts east across New England allowing a ridge to build overhead. Some weak troughing will also be in place across the southeastern states with moisture focused across the Tennessee Valley and Mid-Atlantic. The 12Z GFS is the fastest in trying to pull moisture back north into the area on Sunday but given the strength of the surface high will continue with a dry forecast. Finally by Monday the next upper trough will approach from the northwest with low pops returning to our western counties Monday, increasing and expanding Monday night into Tuesday. && .AVIATION /18Z Tuesday THROUGH Sunday/... Showers and TSRA are expected across the area this afternoon through the evening, although coverage/confidence at this juncture only warrants TEMPO mention at any given TAF site. Higher confidence in TSRA impacts are at KFDY, KCLE, KMFD and KCAK between 22Z and 04Z, with reductions to IFR possible in the heaviest TSRA. Shower/TSRA coverage will diminish after 06Z, with lingering VFR clouds possible. Some reductions to MVFR ceilings possible towards 12Z in the wake of the precipitation, but will improve to VFR towards the end of the period. Mainly south to southwest winds will prevail through the period, although a lake breeze early in the period may keep things more variable at KERI, and to a lesser extent KCLE. OUTLOOK...Intervals of non-VFR possible primarily with thunderstorms possible Wednesday. && .MARINE... Southerly flow of 10-15 knots will develop on Lake Erie tonight and increase into the 10-20 knot range on Wednesday ahead of an approaching cold front. Winds will shift to the north with the passage of the front Wednesday night and a Small Craft Advisory will likely be needed east of the Lake Erie Islands. Winds will drop off fairly quickly on Thursday as high pressure expands south over the Great Lakes Region. Northeast to east winds of 5-15 knots will maintain a little bit of a chop on Lake Erie on Friday and Saturday with flow becoming more east/southeast on Sunday. && .CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OH...None. PA...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Greenawalt NEAR TERM...Greenawalt SHORT TERM...KEC LONG TERM...KEC AVIATION...Greenawalt MARINE...KEC