Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Raleigh/Durham, NC

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234 FXUS62 KRAH 150610 AFDRAH Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Raleigh NC 209 AM EDT Sat Jun 15 2024 .SYNOPSIS...
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A cold front will cross central North Carolina late tonight, then stall well to our south and east through the weekend.
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&& .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
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As of 912 PM Friday... The front remained well to our west and north this evening with pre- frontal trough over central NC. There were hardly any clouds to be found at mid-evening with temperatures in the 80s. It appears we can just about eliminate POP in all but the NE Coastal Plain. There is some moisture convergence and pooling around Rocky Mount, Tarboro, Halifax, to near Smithfield. Dew points were in the lower to mid 70s there. Elsewhere, the dew points were in the mid 60s to around 70. The latest radar indicated the closest shower/storm to our region was the isolated shower NW of Mount Rodgers in SW Virginia. The HRRR had shown some development into NW North Carolina by mid-late evening, but has not backed off that. Instead, it is focusing some scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms in the area of moisture pooling along the trough over the NE Coastal Plain. The MLCapes were only around 1000 j/kg there, so it is not expected to be exceptionally strong. Otherwise, the front will move through late tonight. Lows will be warm, in the mid 60s to lower 70s.
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&& .SHORT TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT/... As of 245 PM Friday... Tonight`s cold front should be just exiting the forecast area to the southeast tomorrow morning, but the front is supposed to linger along the coastline through the daytime hours. The entire forecast area should be dry into the early afternoon, but it appears that by mid afternoon, some thunderstorms should begin to fire along the front again. Models are showing a rather tight gradient of where the storms could occur, and right now, it appears that only portions of Sampson County could receive rain in our area, with the rest of the precipitation remaining to the southeast. However, if the front hangs up a little bit farther to the northwest, then the pops may have to be expanded northwest into Cumberland and Wayne counties or farther. The front will not bring a major change in air mass - high temperatures along with dewpoints on Saturday should each come down a couple degrees. Still, most southern counties should reach the lower 90s, with mid to upper 80s expected for highs elsewhere. The chance for thunderstorms should come to an end with sunset, and the reduction in low temperatures will be more noticeable than the drop in high temperatures - areas in the northeast could possibly drop into the upper 50s, but nearly all locations will have lows in the 60s. && .LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... As of 115 PM Friday... Long term period will be warm and dry as upper level ridge anchors over the Mid-Atlantic region though the week. At the surface, high pressure will move off the New England coast on Sunday and linger over the northern Atlantic into midweek, extending into Central NC keeping warm dry air over the region. Surface flow will generally be from the south to southeast most of the week which will strongly influence above normal temperatures. By mid to late week as high pressure influence weakens, a coastal trough could develop along the coast resulting in some afternoon isolated showers and storms in the far SE portion of the FA. Thus, have a 15-20% PoP for Thursday and Friday afternoon in the SE areas close to the coast. Temperatures, as mentioned before, will be above normal with highs each day in the low to mid 90s. The only exception is Sunday where the NW region could see some cloud coverage from possible shower activity in the the higher mountains, where high temperatures could range from mid to upper 80s over the Piedmont region. && .AVIATION /06Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
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As of 209 AM Saturday... VFR conditions will prevail through the 24 hr TAF period. A backdoor cold front will push through mid-late this afternoon. The passage should be dry, with a brief period of nly sfc gustiness (up to 15 kts) through early afternoon. Sfc flow will subside through the later afternoon period. Outlook: Some early morning stratus could be possible especially at KINT/KGSO Sunday and Monday mornings. Otherwise, VFR conditions are expected.
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&& .RAH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Green NEAR TERM...Badgett/Green SHORT TERM...Green LONG TERM...CA AVIATION...Luchetti