textproduct: Greenville-Spartanburg
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WHAT HAS CHANGED
No substantive changes to the forecast at this time.
KEY MESSAGES
1. High temperatures well below normal today, with spotty showers and isolated afternoon storms. Temperatures warm closer to normal Wednesday, with diurnal convection confined to far western areas. 2. A return to hot and drier conditions is expected during the latter half of the week. A cold front will approach from the north and bring higher rain chances over the weekend.
DISCUSSION
Key message 1: High temperatures well below normal today, with spotty showers and isolated afternoon storms. Temperatures warm closer to normal Wednesday, with diurnal convection confined to far western areas.
Showers continue to weaken and diminish in coverage early this morning, with only light-to-moderate scattered activity noted across southern areas and the NC Piedmont and foothills. Showers are likely to linger in the vicinity of the eastern escarpment of the Blue Ridge through the morning, as a weak easterly upslope flow lingers. Nevertheless, rain rates will far fall short of any excessive rainfall concerns, and the threat of flash flooding has passed for this morning. Relatively cool NE flow will continue across the area today, as inverted surface ridge gradually weakens. Having said that, drier air is forecast to begin filtering into the CWA from the ENE later today. Thus, after widespread morning low cloud cover, portions of the NC Piedmont are expected to begin scattering out during the afternoon, while locations along the NC Blue Ridge, and much of the Upstate and northeast GA may not completely clear out before sunset. As such, the warmest temps (mid-80s) today are forecast along/east of I-77, while forecast maxes across most of the remainder of the area (excepting the mountains along the TN border) are about 10 degrees below climo. Moisture and instability will be sufficient for convection across the southwest 1/2-1/3 of the CWA, and afternoon PoPs (mainly 30-50%) are largely confined to those areas. A small risk of excessive rainfall will exist, mainly in locations across the southwest 1/3 that have received heavy rainfall over the past four days.
A weak surface ridge will remain over the area into Wed, but moisture will become increasingly shallow, with clouds more likely to scatter earlier in the day, and the air mass will quickly modify in the July sun. Temperatures are forecast to warm to near normal Wed. Moderate instability developing across the western part of the area is expected to allow for diurnal convective development across the western 1/3-1/4 of the area.
Key message 2: A return to hot and drier conditions is expected during the latter half of the week. A cold front will approach from the north and bring higher rain chances over the weekend.
Upper ridging will return with a vengeance to end the week, with above-normal temperatures forecast Thursday and Friday. Afternoon Heat Index values may reach 100+ across southern and eastern Piedmont areas both days...although confidence is low at this time. Diurnal convection is expected to be largely confined to the mountains Thu and Fri, with mostly isolated coverage expected Thu, and more like solid scattered activity forecast for Fri.
The global models generally agree in depicting falling heights across the East over the weekend, with an associated frontal boundary forecast to enhance (mainly) diurnal convective chances Saturday and Sunday, with a more typical diurnal convective cycle expected to return early next week. Lower heights should result in temperatures slightly cooling to around normal.
AVIATION /06Z TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/
At KCLT and elsewhere: Showers linger early this morning across the far northern and far southern portion of the Terminal Forecast Area, such that KHKY and KAND are the only sites that may see a SHRA this morning, but even these areas of showers should diminish be largely gone by daybreak. Other than a tempo for -SHRA at KHKY from 06-08Z, VCSH should suffice. Otherwise, most TAF sites are reporting MVFR cigs, with some spotty IFR beginning to appear. Expect all sites to eventually lower to IFR no later than 10Z. Can't rule out some MVFR visby developing, particularly at KAVL and KHKY, but NE winds of 5-10 kts is expected to keep visby VFR at most sites. IFR cigs are expected to linger through most of the morning, with improvement to MVFR expected by early afternoon. Scattered showers and perhaps some TS are expected to develop across the SW half of the area this afternoon...as locations across the NE half (i.e., KHKY and KCLT) should be too stable for convective development. Prob30s for TSRA are advertised at KAND and KGMU, with Prob30s for -SHRA at KGSP and KAVL. Low clouds should finally scatter and any convection dissipate no later than mid-evening.
Outlook: Drier conditions are expected Tuesday night into Wednesday. Typical mid-July coverage of diurnal convection is expected Thursday through the end of the week. Low stratus and/or fog will be possible each morning, mainly in the mtn valleys.
GSP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
GA...None. NC...None. SC...None.
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