Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Dallas/Fort Worth, TX
Issued by NWS Dallas/Fort Worth, TX
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708 FXUS64 KFWD 041036 AFDFWD Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Fort Worth TX 536 AM CDT Mon May 4 2026 ...New AVIATION... .KEY MESSAGES... - There is a 10% chance for isolated storms to affect areas immediately along the Red River this evening. - A cold front will bring scattered showers and storms to the area late Tuesday afternoon into Wednesday. A few strong to severe storms are possible near and east of Interstate 35. && .SHORT TERM... (Tonight through Monday Night) Issued at 1147 PM CDT Sun May 3 2026 It`ll be a seasonably warm and breezy start to the workweek as a robust southerly flow regime becomes established today. Expect south winds of 10-20 mph with gusts of 30-35 mph this afternoon, while strengthened warm advection allows highs to return to the mid and upper 80s. Better moisture return will also occur, with dewpoints climbing back into the 60s during the next 12-18 hours. This will aid in sharpening a dryline across Northwest Texas and western Oklahoma by late afternoon, and a small percentage of model guidance is attempting to convect the dryline as this greater moisture content arrives during peak heating. Convective attempts would likely have a substantial amount of capping and dry air entrainment to overcome, and the potential for storms overall is quite low. We`ll carry some 10-20% PoPs immediately near the Red River this evening with the idea than an isolated storm or two could develop northwest of the CWA and skirt a couple of our north/northwestern counties around sunset. But, the most likely scenario is a dry evening within the CWA. With the boundary layer not fully decoupling overnight, it will remain breezy all the way into Tuesday morning with lows only falling into the upper 60s and lower 70s. && .LONG TERM... (Tuesday through next Sunday) Issued at 1147 PM CDT Sun May 3 2026 Moist southerly flow will continue into Tuesday ahead of an approaching cold front which will sag into North Texas by mid- afternoon. In the prefrontal warm sector, dewpoints will climb into the upper 60s and lower 70s, especially across Central and East Texas. There is still a wide array of convective scenarios that could unfold with this frontal intrusion, mainly due to significant discrepancies regarding cap strength and frontal positioning/timing. The most aggressive guidance suggests that scattered thunderstorms will be able to initiate along the front roughly form the Metroplex northeastward with aid from substantial diurnal destabilization. However, quieter guidance maintains stout and likely insurmountable capping through the late afternoon and early evening in the vicinity of the front, as larger scale ascent lags too far behind the boundary to aid with cap erosion. We`ll continue to advertise a very conditional strong/severe storm threat along the front from late Tuesday afternoon into Tuesday night, as any convection would be capable of strong/severe hail/wind hazards should initiation be able to occur. Another limiting factor could also end up being storm mode, which would likely be a quick transition to linear segments with storm motions and shear vectors oriented very parallel to the initiating boundary. Thunderstorm activity would accompany this front south/southeast into Central and East Texas overnight into early Wednesday morning. Wednesday`s forecast also remains a bit murky for Central Texas at this time due to the handling of the aforementioned cold front. Coarser guidance wants to stall the boudnary`s southward progress and linger it across Central Texas into Wednesday afternoon, allowing it to serve as a focus for additional convective development. However, more aggressive guidance suggests a fairly quick southward advance and departure of this boundary which would bring an end to storm chances perhaps as early as midday Wednesday. We likely won`t have a clearer signal on this portion of the forecast until it is within ~24 hours, as its southward progress could end up being heavily influenced by the amount of convective activity along the boundary Tuesday night. Low rain chances could linger across Central Texas through the late week period if an overrunning regime can be realized behind the frontal passage. However, the majority of the late week period and at least the first portion of the weekend currently favor a mostly dry solution with near or slightly below normal temperatures. && .AVIATION... (12Z TAFS) Issued at 531 AM CDT Mon May 4 2026 Breezy south/southwest winds will prevail through the period while a veil of cirrus overspreads the area today. Expect sustained wind speeds of 10-20 kts and gusts up to 30 kts, with the highest gusts occurring during the afternoon hours. An intrusion of MVFR stratus will occur on Tuesday morning which will result in low cigs at Waco. However, this low deck will likely be shunted east of the Metroplex TAF sites within veering low-level flow, and therefore will not introduce any category reductions at the D10 airports at this time. && .SPOTTER INFORMATION STATEMENT... Spotter activation is not expected at this time. && .PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS... Dallas-Ft. Worth 84 70 90 64 / 0 0 20 30 Waco 82 69 89 70 / 0 0 10 20 Paris 80 68 85 62 / 0 10 30 40 Denton 83 69 89 59 / 0 0 20 20 McKinney 82 69 88 62 / 0 10 30 30 Dallas 84 71 92 65 / 0 0 20 30 Terrell 81 68 88 66 / 0 0 20 30 Corsicana 82 70 89 71 / 0 0 10 20 Temple 81 68 89 70 / 0 0 10 20 Mineral Wells 88 68 90 59 / 0 0 10 20 && .FWD WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SHORT TERM...Stalley LONG TERM....Stalley AVIATION...Stalley