Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Cleveland, OH

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000 FXUS61 KCLE 190555 AFDCLE Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Cleveland OH 155 AM EDT Fri Apr 19 2024 .SYNOPSIS... A cold front will cross the region late tonight and Friday morning. High pressure will return Friday afternoon. A secondary cold front will move through early Saturday followed by high pressure returning for the rest of the weekend. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
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1:55 AM Update: Tweaked POPs through the morning to time the showers/thunder pushing in from the west. Most or all of the area will see at least a bit of rain but the activity has outrun the bulk of the instability and should gradually lose intensity as it pushes through. No severe threat. Original Discussion... Mid/upper shortwave ridging has built into the region this afternoon, with surface high pressure centered over the southern Great Lakes. The associated drier air has finally eroded most of the cloud cover, allowing temperatures to warm into the mid/upper 60s in NW and north central Ohio. Mid-level clouds held on longer in far NE Ohio and NW PA, and this combined with a lake breeze has kept temperatures in the upper 50s there. Expect the clearing to continue to progress east over the next couple of hours, and NW PA will finally see sunshine by 20 or 21Z setting up a fairly pleasant evening areawide. Unfortunately, the nicer weather will not last long with visible satellite and water vapor loops showing a broad mid/upper trough pressing into the northern Rockies, northern Plains, and Upper Midwest. This trough will slowly expand into the Great Lakes late tonight and Friday bringing a push of unseasonably cool air into the region. A strong 125-130 knot H3 jet streak over the Upper Midwest rounding the base of the trough will support a weak surface low lifting from the Mid Mississippi Valley this evening to Lake Erie by Friday morning, extending a cold front through the region. The cold front is expected to be located roughly along the I-71 corridor at 12Z Friday, with it reaching the OH/PA lines by 15 or 16Z. Showers will spread into the region from west to east ahead of the front tonight, beginning after 04Z in NW Ohio and reaching the I-71 and I- 77 corridors by 09-11Z. It will take until 12Z or so for the showers to reach far eastern Ohio and western PA. These showers will be driven by a 30-35 knot low-level jet in response to the aforementioned jet streak, leading to weak warm/moist advection and isentropic ascent combined with strong low-level convergence ahead of the cold front. As the surface low approaches from the southwest tonight, a warm front should at least arc into western and central Ohio leading to backed low-level flow and low-level SRH increasing over 200 m2/s2 along the boundary. Guidance has trended a bit farther north with this boundary overnight, so will need to watch for localized rotation with any embedded convection. The latest SWODY1 has pulled the Marginal Risk into the western and southwestern CWA for mainly gusty winds overnight, but instability will be the main limiting factor. Due to the overnight timing, any instability is expected to be weak and elevated. HREF ensemble means bring about 200-500 joules of elevated CAPE into the region in the warm sector overnight, but little to none is expected at the surface. Despite some rotation possible, this will prevent any tornadoes. We will probably not see any severe weather at all, but given the aforementioned helicity and deep layer shear over 40 kts, cannot rule out an isolated damaging wind gust over the southwestern counties from Findlay to Marion between about 05 and 08Z. Showers will end from west to east fairly quickly Friday morning behind the exiting cold front, and any lingering showers over far eastern Ohio and western PA will be gone by early afternoon as drier air works in. Cold air advection and a fairly tight pressure gradient will lead to fairly breezy W to SW winds behind the front of 10-20 kts, with occasional gusts of 20-25 knots in the afternoon, especially in NW Ohio and near Lake Erie. As the trough continues to dig into the Great Lakes Friday night, a secondary cold front will approach from the north. Moisture is limited, but lift ahead of the front and westerly flow across the lake with weak lake induced instability could generate a few showers in NW PA, so added slight chance PoPs toward sunrise Saturday morning. Highs Friday will stay in the upper 50s to low 60s as the cooler air filters in. Lows tonight will average low/mid 50s, with upper 30s to low 40s Friday night.
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&& .SHORT TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT/... A cool dry weekend is expected with temperatures averaging about 10 degrees below average. A rather deep upper trough over Hudson Bay will persist through the weekend and produce a cool rapid nw flow across the region. Temperatures at 850 mb will drop to -3 to -6C. Overnight lows will drop into the 30s and frost is expected away from Lake Erie both Saturday and Sunday nights. High temperatures will be in the 50s. && .LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... Moderating temperatures with fair weather is expected on Monday as weak high pressure lingers over the region. A shortwave trough will move from the upper Mississippi Valley early Tuesday and into the Great Lakes by Tuesday night. The associated low pressure will track from the western Great Lakes to eastern Ontario and the trailing cold front will cross the region Tuesday night. Showers and thunderstorms will overspread the region Tuesday afternoon and night with the approach and passage of the cold front. A few showers will linger Wednesday morning before much cooler air moves into the region. Unseasonably cool high pressure will build into the region on Thursday and another round of frost is possible Wednesday night. Highs on Monday and Tuesday will be in the 60s with cooler 50s for Wednesday and Thursday. Lows temperatures in the 40s are expected Monday and Tuesday nights with lower to mid 30s on Wednesday night. && .AVIATION /06Z Friday THROUGH Tuesday/...
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Quick-moving batch of rain and thunder along or just ahead of a cold front is quickly approaching from the west and will slide through over the next several hours. VFR continues until this activity arrives at a given terminal. Some vsby restrictions and lightning possible with this activity, especially at TOL, FDY and MFD, though can`t rule out at CLE, CAK and YNG either. Ceilings won`t dramatically fall until the cold front moves through this morning, generally as the batch of rain is exiting. Much of the area has potential to see brief IFR ceilings right behind the cold front. Everyone will return to VFR from northwest to southeast Friday afternoon. Light mainly south-southeast winds at 4-10 knots ahead of the cold front this morning, shifting south-southwest and then west-northwest with the frontal passage. Winds will increase to 10-15 knots with gusts 20-25 knots behind the front before gradually subsiding into this evening. Outlook...Non-VFR possible in showers Tuesday.
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&& .MARINE... Weak high pressure over the region early this evening will quickly shift east as low pressure 29.80 inches over Missouri tracks northeast across Lake Erie by Friday morning. A cold front will push east across the lake Friday afternoon. A reinforcing cold front will cross the Great Lakes on early Saturday. A Small Craft Advisory may be necessary east of Willowick with waves of 3 to 5 feet. High pressure will build east through the Ohio Valley Sunday through Monday. Low pressure will track eastward north of the lake on Tuesday. && .CLE WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OH...None. PA...None. NY...None. MARINE...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Garuckas NEAR TERM...Campbell/Garuckas/Sullivan SHORT TERM...LaPlante LONG TERM...LaPlante AVIATION...Sullivan MARINE...LaPlante

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