Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Greer, SC
Issued by NWS Greer, SC
Versions:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
194 FXUS62 KGSP 090334 AFDGSP Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Greenville-Spartanburg SC 1134 PM EDT Wed May 8 2024 .SYNOPSIS... Showers and thunderstorm activity will be more numerous ahead of a strong cold front tonight into Thursday, with severe storms possible. The cold front pushes east early Friday morning but another system approaching out of the south may bring shower and thunderstorm chances back during the day on Friday. Drier conditions and below normal temperatures return for the weekend. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH THURSDAY/... As of 1126 PM EDT Wednesday: Over the past two hours, we have been watching supercells come off the Cumberland Plateau and begin to congeal and grow upscale into more of a convective line across the Great Valley of TN. The storms will likely remain strong to severe as they cross over a sfc-based CAPE plume of 1000-1500 J/kg that exists along the TN/NC line, but east of the spine of the mtns, the environment is much less hospitable. The air mass east of the Blue Ridge for the most part did not recover, and has only 500 J/kg at best, which will keep most of the activity in check. The main concern is the area from the SW mountains down across northeast GA and the Savannah R basin. An old outflow boundary from the afternoon convection stalled across this area and a CAPE gradient of 500-1500 J/kg persists, with enough effective shear and low level shear to allow storms to maintain supercell characteristics. All threats are in play across this area, so the SPC issued a new Tornado Watch to cover the possibilities. We are especially interested in the cells crossing north Georgia as of 03Z. This activity will traverse the fcst area thru the late night hours and feel the HRRR has had a good and consistent handle on it. Another round of showers and thunderstorms may come in behind this one, but the severity will be even more restricted toward daybreak. Otherwise...for Thursday...not quite as warm but still mid 80s in the Piedmont. Slight Risk in place on Thursday but that`s as the convection slips south in the morning. && .SHORT TERM /THURSDAY NIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY/... As of 100 PM EDT Wednesday: For the Thursday night period, the 12z HREF and CAM consensus depicts just very limited and isolated deep convection lingering from whatever daytime activity redevelops, along with a smattering, but again limited response into the night and mainly confined to the mountains. Not unexpectedly, the pattern atop the SE CONUS remains dynamic into Friday as energy rounding the base of the upper trough will finally be again to shove lingering sfc frontal zone downstream of the cwfa. But before it does, we will be wary for the threat for tstm encroachment and redevelopment, along the front itself, and in addition, MCS/bowing cluster moving in from Georgia. Sensible weather will feature a shotgun mid-chance pop for Friday with isolated svr storms possible mainly SE of I-85. Will plan on overspreading the region with deep layered dry air within the broad downward vertical motion behind the departing s/wv axis Friday night. Expecting to be under a well mixed and more seasonable airmass within the deep cyclonic flow on Saturday featuring maximum temperatures close to climo. && .LONG TERM /SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... As of 315 am EDT Wednesday: A broad upper trough is expected to progress across the East through the weekend, with dry air/pleasant surface dewpoints supporting wide diurnal temp ranges...max temps averaging around normal and min temps a category or so below climo. By early in the work week, a split flow regime is expected to be in place across the eastern Conus, with a short wave ridge developing across the Southeast...downstream of a southern Great Plains upper low. Global models are at odds regarding the evolution of this feature, namely its interaction with the northern stream, and eventual impacts on sensible weather across the Southeast. For now, there`s enough of a signal to include chance PoPs across much of the CWA by Mon night/Tue. Temperatures are forecast to be very close to normal through the period. && .AVIATION /04Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... At KCLT and elsewhere: VFR for the time being at all terminals, and that should hold into the late evening, hopefully through the end of busy operations. Most of the forecast area has rain-cooled air with some sct-bkn low VFR debris clouds. We may see some brief MVFR at KAND, but this is not likely and left out of the fcst. Wind will be generally light and modulated by numerous outflow boundaries across the region, so many places will have a variable direction for the evening, until a southerly flow can be re-established. We look to the west and await the next round of storms, which the HRRR brings into the mtns at 04Z and then quickly east through the pre-dawn hours. All terminals should see thunderstorms with this complex, so a 4-hr TEMPO was employed for the initial round. There could be a second round, or at least a trailing stratiform rain for several hours into the middle part of the morning. There should be some MVFR cloudiness lingering into the middle part of the day. Once we scatter the low deck, expect deep enough mixing for some occasional wind gusts from the SW thru the rest of the afternoon. Outlook: A system lifting out of the south my increase shower and thunderstorm chances again on Friday, but confidence on this remains low. Drier conditions can be expected this weekend. && .GSP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... GA...None. NC...None. SC...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...CSH NEAR TERM...PM/TDP SHORT TERM...CSH LONG TERM...CSH AVIATION...PM