Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Pittsburgh, PA
Issued by NWS Pittsburgh, PA
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135 FXUS61 KPBZ 141845 AFDPBZ Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Pittsburgh PA 145 PM EST Fri Nov 14 2025 .SYNOPSIS... High pressure departs today, with dry weather into tonight. Fast moving low pressure crossing the Great Lakes tomorrow will bring increasing warmth and moisture along with the chance of showers and gusty thunderstorms. Brisk and cooler weather is on tap for Sunday with northwest-flow showers. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... KEY MESSAGES: - Quiet weather with seasonable temperatures into this evening with departing high pressure - First raindrops may arrive late tonight --------------------------------------------------------------- Warm advection aloft continues to support a fairly widespread altocumulus deck across the region, which is limiting temperature rises and providing a decent gradient. Afternoon highs are likely to top in the mid and upper 40s north of Pittsburgh, and in the 50s near the city and to the south. After a period of clearing this evening, clouds may once again thicken and lower in advance of an approaching warm front and upper ridge. Enough moisture/isentropic lift may exist after 06Z for the first drops of light rain to arrive. A temperature gradient is likely to remain, with near-freezing overnight lows north of I-80 to values in the mid 40s to the south of I-70. && .SHORT TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... KEY MESSAGES: - Rain chances increase Saturday afternoon and night - Isolated thunderstorms with gusty wind are possible Saturday evening - Turning blustery and colder Sunday, with showers continuing ---------------------------------------------------------------- The flattening ridge axis crosses the Upper Ohio Valley Saturday morning, accompanied by the surface warm front. Increasing column moisture and some modest isentropic lift may continue to fuel some patchy light rain/showers through the morning. There also could be a period of several hours that favor an area of advection fog, particularly north of Pittsburgh, as suggested by HREF visibility probabilities. This would be in spite of strengthening flow aloft, although eventually, by midday/early afternoon, wind should become strong enough, and temperatures warm enough, to lessen the fog concern. Attention then turns to the cold front which is slated to cross the region Saturday evening. A 500mb shortwave will take on a negative tilt as it crosses the Upper Great Lakes Saturday afternoon and evening, helping to propel the boundary forward. CAMs do show shower development along and ahead of the boundary, but the potential for deep convection still remains questionable. After weakening a bit in the morning, 0-6km bulk shear increases into the 45 to 55 knot range during the afternoon and evening. Instability remains the limiting factor. A warm layer aloft remains present on model soundings, limiting CAPE (HREF probs of 200 J/kg generally 50 percent or less from 6PM to midnight), and lapse rates aloft remain poor. Support for lift to overcome the inhibition remains uncertain. A 250mb jet will be nosing into the Ohio Valley on Saturday, but timing of best upper divergence in favored quadrants is not clear. Still, if evaporative cooling aloft can sharpen lapse rates at least on a localized basis, some low potential for downward transport of 40-50 knot flow to the surface remains. The SPC day 2 Marginal severe risk for wind gusts is reasonable. Away from showers/convection, even modest mixing will allow background wind gusts into the 20 to 25 knot range. Given the shear and cold air aloft, some small, graupel-like hail could be possible in a few cases as well. Northwest-flow showers should continue behind the front through Saturday night into Sunday, eventually becoming mainly concentrated to areas north of US-422 thanks to lake enhancement. 850mb temperatures falling to subzero values will allow a mix with, and and eventual change to snow by 00Z Monday, with any accumulation of note likely holding off until after sunset. A still-decent surface pressure gradient and better low- level lapse rates on Sunday should allow for more efficient mixing, with widespread wind gusts to 30 knots. The Laurels of course will likely reach higher peaks between 30 and 40 knots. A Wind Advisory may eventually be needed for eastern Tucker County; NBM probabilities of max gusts greater than 45 MPH are in the 75 to 95 percent range. && .LONG TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/... KEY MESSAGES: - Potential lake effect snow band late Sunday into Monday in northwest PA - Active weather pattern continues, favoring seasonably cool temperature ------------------------------------------------------------------- By Sunday afternoon/evening, cold advection in northwest flow plus weak vorticity advection will begin to aid development of a lake effect band over a narrow swath of northwest PA that will slowly taper off into Monday. The key trends both in global and initial hi-res model runs suggest slightly cooler 850mb temps (inching toward -8 degrees C) with subtle wind angle changes that may create a moisture fetch from Lake Superior through Lake Erie. If this occurs, a narrow portion of Venango/Forest/Clarion/Jefferson Counties could see snowfall accumulations approach/exceed warning criteria (6+) inches. Confidence remains low without more higher-resolution data as well as potential variances in the snow band axis, but highlighted this region for potential snow headlines through the day Monday. Otherwise, cold northwest flow with high pressure to the west will support drying conditions across the region late Sunday into Monday as area temperature falls back below normal. Residual pressure gradients and mixing support periods of 25-35mph gusts through Monday in the lowlands, with potential Advisory level gusts in the highest terrain of eastern Tucker County. Again, if confidence increases on this occurrence, wind headlines may be needed. The active weather pattern continues Tuesday as lingering troughing over the eastern CONUS sees a fast-moving embedded shortwave dip south of the region that will create additional precipitation chances favoring south of Pittsburgh (current thermal profiles lends to rain with any snow struggling to accumulate). Thereafter, long range ensemble models show increasing variance with placement of upper ridging, suggesting it either edges east (fostering warming trend and brief dry period) or remains over central CONUS (maintain cool weather with intermittent but low accumulation precipitation). && .AVIATION /18Z FRIDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... VFR conditions are forecast through tonight. Mid-level clouds will continue to cross with a disturbance aloft and warm advection in northwest flow. The lower levels remain fairly dry overall. Ceilings above 8kft are forecast, with some partial clearing expected tonight. With a weaker pressure gradient as compared to yesterday, southwest wind is only forecast to reach the 10 to 15 knot range in gusts this afternoon. Clouds should thicken and lower tonight with an approaching warm front. A few, non-restrictive light rain showers may begin to arrive after 06Z and spread north through the morning. With a crossing warm front bringing a low-level moisture push, model soundings are suggesting the development of advection fog beginning around sunrise and overspreading some areas near and to the north of PIT. Probabilities of MVFR ceilings begin to spike above 80 percent after 09Z or so, mainly south of I-70, before overspreading other terminals during the rest of the morning. IFR visibility probabilities are highest (above 50 percent) in the I-80 corridor from mid-morning into early afternoon. Thus, at FKL/DUJ, prevailing IFR ceiling/visibility was introduced at the tail end of the new TAF set for fog and potential drizzle. The southern extent of these restrictions remains a bit uncertain, and PROB30s were used for potential impacts at BVI, PIT, AGC, and LBE. HLG, ZZV, and MGW were left out of this for now. Southwest wind will begin to pick up after sunrise, with some isolated gusts to 20 knots possible, particularly south of PIT. Outlook... Restrictions should become more widespread as Saturday progresses, with better chance for showers and elevated wind gusts Saturday afternoon and evening along a cold front. Lake- enhanced precipitation is expected behind the front on Sunday with the typical scattered nature. && .PBZ WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... PA...None. OH...None. WV...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Frazier/CL NEAR TERM...CL SHORT TERM...CL LONG TERM...Frazier AVIATION...CL