


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Detroit/Pontiac, MI
Issued by NWS Detroit/Pontiac, MI
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503 FXUS63 KDTX 152330 AFDDTX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Detroit/Pontiac MI 730 PM EDT Tue Jul 15 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Shower and thunderstorm chances begin Wednesday and increase Wednesday late afternoon-evening through Thursday with potential for heavy rainfall. - A cold front sweeps through the area early Thursday night followed by cooler and less humid air to end the work week and start the weekend. && .AVIATION... A weak shortwave slowly migrating northeast across MO/IL/IN will lift across far southeast Michigan on Wednesday. This lead pocket of energy aloft will help mid-level cloud spread into the area with the potential for a few clusters of showers and storms during the mid- late morning hours. Have mentions of a PROB30 for DTW/DET/YIP for roughly 12-16Z to hint at this potential. Instability continues to build through the late morning and afternoon hours, which will lead to increasing chances for storms Wednesday afternoon and evening. Late Wednesday night into early Thursday morning, there is lower confidence regarding how the complex of storms exiting Wisconsin holds together as it moves east into lower Michigan. For DTW/D21 Convection...High-res models suggest a cluster of showers and storms may impact the D21 airspace between 10-15Z. Thunderstorm coverage then becomes widespread after about 17/18Z. THRESHOLD PROBABILITIES... * Low to Moderate for thunderstorms after 18Z Wednesday. && .PREV DISCUSSION... Issued at 310 PM EDT Tue Jul 15 2025 DISCUSSION... Southern lower MI has remained under the influence of surface high pressure maintaining sunny skies and light winds thus far today. This has also kept lingering wildfire smoke over the area though what wind we have in addition to diurnal mixing has aided in decreasing the worst of the haze. Said high vacates to the east late this evening as a weak shortwave embedded within deeper layer southwest flow lifts out of the mid-Mississippi. Wave is progged to slide to our south, towards central OH resulting in the bulk of forcing likewise holding south of the state line. That said, with the northern fringe of the PV anomaly glancing the south and the attendant theta-e gradient lifting into the state, a few showers creeping north into southern SE MI (south of I-96/696) are expected. Scattered to numerous convection then develops over the CWA during the afternoon as moisture advection fully establishes 70F+ surface dewpoints over the area allowing diurnal heating to build 1500J/kg of SBCAPE (bullish solutions reach or exceed 2000J/kg). Despite the ample instability, the overall wind field is abysmal with column wind aob 20kts up through 400mb yielding minimal shear. Main hazard tomorrow will be heavy rainfall any under storm as PWAT`s climb to around 1.75" (right around the 90th daily climo percentile) with warm cloud layers 10-14kft. Slow storm motion, given the weak wind field, supports longer duration rainfall over locales as well increasing locally heavy rainfall/flooding chances. For the Wednesday afternoon-evening period, isolated water-laden downbursts as pulse storms collapse would be the potential severe hazard- region remains under a Day 2 marginal risk from SPC. Additional storm chances arrive late evening-early Wednesday night as some manner of convective complex crosses Lake Michigan into lower MI. Late timing, after 04Z, limits the magnitude of lingering instability with MLCAPE falling sub 1000J/kg. Should this organized convection sufficiently survive to this side of the state a few strong wind gusts can`t be completely ruled out. Worth noting there are a notable subset of CAM solutions, like the HRDPS, that advertise convection effectively dying on our doorstep resulting in only spotty showers. Surface low pressure tracks across the upper Great Lakes Thursday morning with its attendant cold front sinking through the state over the course of the day. Some scattered shower/t-storm redevelopment occurs along the front with greatest chances/coverage likely south of I-69 as these areas have a longer duration of diurnal heating/destabilization compared to north given the faster frontal speed. Front looks to clear the region by the first half of Thursday night ushering in a cooler, much less humid airmass for Friday. 850mb temps fall to around 10C yielding seasonably cool highs in the upper 70s to 80 as PW falls sub 1". High pressure holds over the area through early Saturday morning before another weak shortwave arrives over the Great Lakes/Ohio Valley. This system brings the next chances showers and storms for both Saturday and Sunday. MARINE... Modest uptick in southerly winds this evening over northern Lake Huron, with sustained winds reaching near 15 knots. Increasing low level moisture tomorrow and daytime instability will produce numerous showers and thunderstorms in the afternoon. Some of the thunderstorms could be strong, producing localized wind gusts in excess of 45 knots. Scattered-numerous showers and thunderstorms likely persist Wednesday night, as low pressure and associated cold front race east, passing through the Central Great Lakes Thursday morning. North-northwest winds behind this system will likely top out briefly in the 20-25 knot range over Lake Huron, which will bring a chance of waves of 4 feet or greater to clip the nearshore waters by Thursday evening. There may be just enough of an offshore component to prevent small craft advisories however. Winds veer around to the north-northeast Thursday evening, but should be 15 knots or less by that time, with light and variable winds for Friday as a large area of high pressure encompasses the Great Lakes region. HYDROLOGY... Low pressure tracking into the Great Lakes/Ohio Valley brings chances for scattered showers towards the Ohio border Wednesday morning. Scattered to numerous showers and storms then develop during the afternoon-evening as an increasingly humid airmass settles over the region with surface dewpoints in the lower 70s and PW values around 1.75". Overall setup is favorable for locally heavy rain with any thunderstorm given this ample moisture as well as a deep warm cloud layer increasing precipitation efficiency and a very weak background wind field supporting slow moving pulse thunderstorms. Rainfall rates of 1-2"/hr expected with these storms which will lead to minor flooding in low-lying/flood prone areas. && .DTX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MI...None. Lake Huron...None. Lake St Clair...None. Michigan waters of Lake Erie...None. && $$ AVIATION.....JA DISCUSSION...KDK MARINE.......SF HYDROLOGY....KDK You can obtain your latest National Weather Service forecasts online at www.weather.gov/detroit.