Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Cleveland, OH

Current Version |  Previous Version |  Text Only |  Print | Product List |  Glossary On
Versions: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50
-- Highlight Changed Discussion --
-- Discussion containing changed information from previous version are highlighted. --
722 FXUS61 KCLE 040811 AFDCLE Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Cleveland OH 411 AM EDT Tue Jun 4 2024 .SYNOPSIS... A warm front lifts north across the region today and tonight followed by a cold front on Wednesday night. A trough builds in on Thursday which will linger across the area through the weekend. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
-- Changed Discussion --
High pressure has moved off to the east coast, though near calm conditions could result in very patchy radiational fog in some inland valleys east of I-77. Southerly flow develops today, with temperatures warming into the mid to upper 80s (perhaps even a couple spots touching 90). Dew points will be manageable in the low 60s, while partly cloudy skies and at least a light breeze should minimize heat risk. A light lake breeze develops, though shouldn`t make too much inland progress due to background environmental winds out of the south. A deep upper-level trough begins digging down into the Upper Midwest late tonight into Wednesday morning, with its associated occluded low well off to the northwest in Manitoba, Canada. A cold front will extend southward, bisecting the CONUS in the vicinity of the Mississippi River by Wednesday morning with a warm front extending from a triple point area along this cold front. The warm front lifts northeast across the forecast area late tonight (boundary is more observable in dew point or theta-e rather than temperature) with some frontogenesis in the 925-700mb layer providing a focus for a line of rain showers and perhaps an isolated thunderstorms late tonight through early Wednesday morning. Behind this front, dew points rise into at least the mid to upper 60s, with pockets of 70 dew points possible. Surface-level warming will greatly depend on daytime cloud cover and any morning convection, though it seems most model guidance is predicting at least temperatures into the low 80s, which is likely to contribute to MLCAPE of 1000+ J/kg. As the upper-level trough and associated belt of mid-level southwesterly winds, deep-layer shear of around 30 knots should be sufficient for organized convection and a low chance of severe weather. Convection is likely to develop along a pre- frontal trough (from decayed convection from previous day`s system) and/or along the cold front itself sometime Wednesday afternoon, with shear vectors favoring a mixed-mode (probably clusters of storms rather than discrete supercells or a fully developed QLCS). Storms will tend to grow upscale into a more defined line as they move east across the area. Development along the cold front would likely have the been severe weather chances and would likely result in later timing across the area (west of I-77 4-8 PM, east of I-77 8-11 PM). Currently SPC has 5% probabilities for damaging winds, which is expected to be the primary severe weather hazard but would not be surprised if a 2% tornado outlook was added down the road. It`s localized, but many models have some clockwise curvature in forecast hodographs with ~100 0-1km SRH and near 1 STP. Localized flooding with heavy rain could be possible primarily due to the seasonably high moisture content in the environment (characterized by high PWATs, dew points, warm cloud depths, etc.). Even so, antecedent conditions aren`t concerning (and actually most of the region is somewhat dry and could use the rain) and would likely need some convective development ahead of the "main line".
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/...
-- Changed Discussion --
An unseasonably deep closed upper trough will settle into the Great Lakes this period and won`t be going anywhere fast, bringing a period of cooler than average temperatures with occasional shower and storm chances. There may even be some lake enhancement during the overnight and early morning hours beginning Friday. A cold front will still be crossing the area Wednesday evening before exiting east. Showers and storms remain in the forecast along and ahead of the frontal passage before a brief dry break. By Thursday and Friday we`ll be beneath the influence of the closed upper trough settling into the Great Lakes with various smaller shortwaves and associated surface troughs rotating through the larger trough. Guidance is beginning to key in on one such feature dropping through the area Thursday morning and early afternoon... another late Thursday night or early Friday...and yet another later Friday evening or Friday night. It`ll be an active pattern. It will not rain the whole period, though there will be occasional chances for showers and perhaps an isolated storm beginning early Thursday through Friday night. Precip chances will largely be focused by the aforementioned shortwaves and surface troughs rotating around the large closed upper low, though there will also be a diurnal flavor with showers generally more numerous during peak daytime heating hours each day beneath chilly air aloft. The one area that will likely buck the diurnal trend will be the primary "snowbelt" region from far Northeast OH into Northwest PA. Lake Erie water temperatures range from 16-18C east of Cleveland to 18-21C west of Cleveland, and 850mb temperatures will fall to a 4-7C range by Friday and Friday night. Diurnal heating on land will tend to disrupt any lake effect/enhanced processes during the day Friday with activity becoming more focused away from the lakeshore, though at night temperatures aloft will be just cold enough to actually focus/enhance showers east of Lake Erie...especially Friday night. Lows Wednesday night will generally dip into the low to mid 60s, with highs rebounding into the mid to upper 70s for Thursday as dew points cool into the 50s. Lows Thursday night will dip into the 50s, with a somewhat greater airmass change by Friday with highs likely ranging from the upper 60s in far Northeast OH/Northwest PA to the low 70s along the I-75 corridor. Rain amounts will generally be modest with the occasional shower chances Thursday and Friday, though parts of the primary snowbelt may begin picking up somewhat more moderate rain amounts due to some added enhancement from the lake, especially early Friday and again overnight Friday night.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH MONDAY/...
-- Changed Discussion --
More of the same through the weekend and likely to start next week, with the closed upper trough sitting over the Great Lakes and only very slowly filling through the period. This will lead to a continuation of cooler than average temperatures and occasional shower chances, with some lake enhancement to the rain showers possible during the night and early morning hours east and southeast of Lake Erie. Guidance has generally trended towards the trough lifting out even slower than some prior runs depicted, so POPs have increased a bit in some forecast periods this weekend. Still not looking at all day washout rains, but it`ll be an unsettled and at times showery pattern to be sure. There will be a diurnal flavor to the showers with activity more numerous during peak heating hours, though various subtle shortwaves and surface troughs rotating through will also focus rain chances. QPF amounts remain generally modest through the extended, though depending on the amount of lake enhancement parts of Northeast OH and Northwest PA could rack up a bit more rain than the rest of the area through early next week. Temperatures will begin to slowly moderate by Sunday and Monday, though highs in the 70s and lows in the 50s will remain common.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .AVIATION /06Z Tuesday THROUGH Saturday/... VFR conditions are observed and are expected to be the predominant condition through the TAF period. The exception could be some patchy BR, especially for central and east-central Ohio, early this morning between 08-12Z. Isolated rain showers might start moving in from the southwest late tonight, but this is low confidence. Only added VCSH to KFDY and KCLE. Winds will be light and variable or from the south tonight under 5 knots. Winds become predominantly out of the south and strengthen to 5 to 10 knots during the daytime hours today. Another lake breeze is likely this afternoon, though probably most make as much inland progress as yesterday. Outlook...Non-VFR is expected with periods of showers and thunderstorms Wednesday and Wednesday night. Non-VFR will be possible with scattered rain showers and isolated afternoon thunderstorms Thursday through Saturday. && .MARINE...
-- Changed Discussion --
A diffuse warm front will be located near Lake Erie through tonight. Generally light east-southeast flow will turn east-northeast and increase to 10-15 knots due to a lake breeze this afternoon, increasing chop in the nearshore waters. Winds shift south at 10-15 knots overnight tonight into Wednesday. A cold front will cross the lake Wednesday evening, with cyclonic flow around a relatively large surface low pressure controlling the winds over Lake Erie Thursday through much of the weekend. Winds will shift to the west-southwest behind the front Wednesday night through Thursday. Winds will shift westerly Thursday night and remain generally westerly through the weekend. A somewhat tight pressure gradient and cold air advection will increase winds to 10 to at times 20 knots Wednesday night through Saturday. Winds should gradually relax later this weekend into early next week as the low pressure affecting the Great Lakes slowly weakens and begins exiting to the east. Still believe there may be one or two windows of Small Craft Advisory conditions in the central and eastern nearshore waters between Wednesday night and Saturday as waves will build to 4 or so feet at times in the nearshore waters when the westerly winds are strongest, though guidance still disagrees on when windows of stronger winds will be. Thunderstorms are likely over the lake Wednesday and Wednesday night ahead of the cold frontal passage, with a low risk for isolated thunder over the lake Thursday through the weekend.
-- End Changed Discussion --
&& .CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OH...Air Quality Alert until midnight EDT tonight for OHZ010>014- 020>022-089. PA...None. NY...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Saunders NEAR TERM...Saunders SHORT TERM...Sullivan LONG TERM...Sullivan AVIATION...Saunders MARINE...Sullivan