Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Cleveland, OH

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248
FXUS61 KCLE 050824
AFDCLE

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Cleveland OH
424 AM EDT Sun May 5 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
A cold front brings showers and thunder storms today, exiting to
the east tonight. High pressure builds in from the north for
Monday. A warm front comes through Tuesday, followed by a cold
front Tuesday night.


&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH MONDAY/...
Cold front stretching from Michigan through Indiana and western
Kentucky will track eastward into western Ohio over the next few
hours, then into the CWA through the late morning and afternoon.
Currently, ahead of the cold front, convection firing along PVA in
the southwesterly flow aloft. The cold front coming through later
today will provide forcing for convective initiation after 16Z.
Modest SBCAPE becomes available with some heating, but with modest
lapse rates and in the mid levels and low/mid level flows less than
25kts, only expecting some wind gusts and perhaps some hail. Still
outlooked for a marginal risk from SPC generally east of I-71 but
think any issues with convection today would be isolated, although
non-zero. Cold front should be east of the CWA by 03Z Monday with
low and mid level clearing. Surface high pressure over the Great
Lakes  will then build in from the north tonight taking POPs south
of the CWA. Meanwhile, a trough axis again in the southwesterly flow
will begin moving into the Ohio Valley, bringing POPs northward
again, but coming up short of the southern zones by 00Z Tuesday.
Behind the cold front, a bit cooler weather expected Monday with mid
60s north to lower 70s south.

&&

.SHORT TERM /MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/...
High pressure over the eastern Great Lakes will shift to New England
by Tuesday. At the same time, a 120 knot upper level jet rounds the
base of the Plains trough with the trough becoming oriented from
Minnesota to the Central Great Lakes. Low level moisture advection
ramps up as a surface trough weakens while reaching the local area.
Slowed down chances of rain although pops remain fairly high as the
warm front lifts north Tuesday afternoon and evening. Instability
may reach 1500-2000 J/kg of ml CAPE. 0-6km shear values vary based
on different model solutions but could be in the 30-50 knot range.
The Storm Prediction Center has included most of the western half of
the area in a Slight Risk for severe weather with a marginal risk
extending a little farther east to nearly the Ohio/Pennsylvania
state line. High temperatures are forecast to reach the mid 70s to
near 80 degrees with dewpoints climbing into the low 60s along the
front. Organized convection appears possible both along the
northward moving warm front and ahead of the cold front that will
settle back south Tuesday evening. Most lingering activity should
exit the area to the east Wednesday morning. Cooling behind the
front on Tuesday looks negligible with highs on Wednesday back into
the upper 70s. Can not rule out a low chance of showers and
thunderstorms during the afternoon on Wednesday depending on the
where the frontal boundary stalled.

&&

.LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/...
Another area of low pressure is forecast to track northeast from the
southern Plains to the Central Great Lakes on Thursday bringing more
showers and possibly thunderstorms. A stronger cold front will push
south across the area Thursday night into Friday morning as the
upper level trough deepens overhead. High temperatures will be below
normal Friday and Saturday and followed guidance trends in lowering
temperatures a few degrees for both days. Temperatures will
generally be in the low 60s but may not get out of the 50s in NW
Pennsylvania where 850mb temperatures may be as low as 3-4C. Models
are struggling with how to handle the interaction between this
trough and another piece of energy diving south out of Canada. In
general expecting the weekend to be on the cool side of normal with
scattered showers and a broad cyclonic flow.

&&

.AVIATION /06Z Sunday THROUGH Thursday/...
Have a mixed bag of ceilings and visibilities at this hour for
the terminals in our area. Some clearing in NW OH has allowed
for fog development at TOL while further east, MVFR/IFR ceilings
prevail, and a few scattered showers exist. Expect these trends
to continue through the remainder of the overnight and into the
day Sunday. Chances for showers/storms increase after 18Z east
of I-71 primarily as a cold front tracks west to east through
the region, and highlight the CAK/YNG terminals for this threat.
Low ceilings to linger in the wake of this cold front. Wind
gusts possible in these storms.


Outlook...Non-VFR likely with periodic showers and thunderstorms
on Tuesday and Wednesday.

&&

.MARINE...
A trough will cross Lake Erie today, pulling a cold front southeast
across the lake. Winds veer to the north behind the front and
increase to 10 to 20 knots with waves building to 1 to 3 feet. Winds
veer to northeasterly on Monday as high pressure builds from the
central to eastern Great Lakes. An active pattern will follow for
the remainder of the week. A warm front will lift north across the
lake on Wednesday with southwesterly winds of 10-15 knots. A second
area of low pressure is expected to track near Lake Erie on
Thursday, pulling a stronger cold front south behind it on Friday.
The track of this low may change and have an effect on wind
direction, speeds, and wave heights. Tentatively conditions look to
approach Small Craft Advisory criteria by Friday.


&&

.CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
OH...None.
PA...None.
NY...None.
MARINE...None.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...26
NEAR TERM...26
SHORT TERM...KEC
LONG TERM...KEC
AVIATION...26
MARINE...KEC