Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Greer, SC

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421 FXUS62 KGSP 170713 AFDGSP Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Greenville-Spartanburg SC 313 AM EDT Tue Sep 17 2024 .SYNOPSIS...
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The remnants of the coastal low will meander over the region and keep elevated rain chances across the area into today and tonight. By Wednesday, the remnant low will stall out over the Mid-Atlantic, while high pressure begins to build into the region from the north and west late in the week.
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&& .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
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Key Messages: 1) The remnants of Potential Tropical Cyclone Eight is gradually weakening this morning as it drifts across northern SC. 2) Flood Watch for Flash Flooding remains in Effect for the Charlotte Metro Area through 8 AM this morning. 3) Heaviest rain going forward is expected to be along the eastern NC Escarpment and adjacent foothills, but not enough to warrant expanding the Flood Watch. As of 3:30 AM EDT Tuesday: The remnants of Potential Tropical Cyclone (PTC) Eight continues to gradually drift inland over the Carolinas and weaken. A deformation band of mainly light to moderate rain has set up along the eastern NC Escarpment, which is where the heaviest additional QPF is expected this morning. The Flood Watch seems to be getting dry slotted, and additional rainfall should be fairly light going forward. But recent rainfall of only an inch over Charlotte is causing streams to start rising again, and minor flooding issues may develop. So will let the Flood Watch continue for now. The rest of the day, the story will be a generally low overcast sky with spotty light rain lingering across much of the forecast area. The remnants of PTC 8 will stall over the Upstate this aftn, then wobble east and then north tonight. Additional showers are progged to form mainly on the west and north sides of the circulation, which means highest PoPs will extend from the northern Upstate thru the Central and Northern NC Mountains. The southern Upstate and the Charlotte area should be on the drier side of the circulation, but still could see a few periods of light rain or showers. Highs will be well-below normal under the clouds. Tonight, with the low still wobbling over the area, continued cloudy skies and showery conditions expected. QPF should be light. Lows will be slightly above normal.
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&& .SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/... As of 135 AM EDT Tuesday: The leftovers from Potential Tropical Cyclone 8 will evolve into a weak closed upper low centered right over the CFWA and meander over the area through the day Wednesday into Wednesday night. The combination of the closed upper low and above-normal PWAT values (~1.50"-1.75") will support elevated coverage of showers, which is represented well with likely PoPs (55%-70%) over the NC mountains and chance PoPs (25%-54%) elsewhere. Model guidance suggests a few hundred joules per kilogram of instability may develop across the CFWA during peak heating Wednesday, which could lead to a few embedded thunderstorms as well. Rain chances will linger into the nighttime period Wednesday as the upper closed low begins to open up into a shortwave trough and gradually lift into the northeastern CONUS by late Thursday. Dry air entrainment will begin to take place as upper/mid-level north-northwesterly flow filtering in as the shortwave trough axis shifts east of the CFWA. Lingering showers may remain in place over the favorable upslope regions over the mountains late Thursday, but the expectation is that rest of the area will dry out by the end of the forecast period. Temperatures are expected to remain a few ticks below normal for afternoon highs both Wednesday and Thursday, while overnight lows run at or slightly above normal thanks to extensive cloud cover and increased rain chances. && .LONG TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH MONDAY/...
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As of 300 AM EDT Tuesday: Changes in the synoptic pattern becomes evident in the extended forecast period as any lingering upper troughiness begins to lift out the region and a stout upper anticyclone sets up shop over northern Mexico and the Southern Plains. Over the weekend, the upper anticyclone will pivot eastward and allow for gradual height rises to move into the southeastern CONUS. At the same time, weak surface ridging will result in a drier airmass and lead to much improved sensible weather conditions with afternoon highs and overnight lows at or slightly below normal for much of the medium range. The upper ridge over the central CONUS will begin to breakdown and large scale changes start to take place beyond D7, but the current D4-D7 deserves two thumbs up.
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&& .AVIATION /07Z TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... At KCLT and elsewhere: The remnants of Potential Tropical Cyclone Eight will drift over northern SC today, keeping plenty of low clouds and areas of mainly light to moderate rain bands around. The axis of the rain is expected to stall roughly SW-NE across the NC mountains this morning and continue to weaken. Then additional showers will develop this aftn across mainly the Upstate and southern NC mountains, lingering thru this evening. KCLT will be on the east the remnant low today, resulting in winds veering from NE to ESE by late morning. KCLT will likely see a lull in precip, but IFR cigs are expected to persist thru the day with some potential for improvement to MVFR late aftn. Cigs should lower across the area this evening, as the low continues to spin. Outlook: A weak upper low will linger over the Carolinas into Wednesday before gradually weakening and lifting NE late Wednesday into Thursday. This will keep precip chances and possible low cigs around thru Thursday. On Friday, sfc high pressure builds into the area from the north allowing drier weather and VFR conditions to return. && .GSP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... GA...None. NC...Flood Watch until 8 AM EDT this morning for NCZ057-070>072-082. SC...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...CAC NEAR TERM...ARK SHORT TERM...CAC LONG TERM...CAC AVIATION...ARK