textproduct: Central Illinois

This forecast discussion was created in the public domain by the National Weather Service. It can be found in its original form here.

KEY MESSAGES

- Beneficial rainfall is on tap this week. The 00z Mar 2 LREF indicates a 50-70% chance of greater than 2 inches of rain from today through next Sunday morning along and south of a Rushville to Rantoul line.

- Strong thunderstorms are possible Wednesday. The highest probability for severe weather (greater than a 15% chance) will focus from northeast Texas into the Ozarks.

..Strong Thunderstorms Wednesday

00z Mar 2 models have come into better agreement concerning the track and timing of low pressure across the Midwest by mid-week. The GFS has slowed the system from its previous runs while the ECMWF has quickened it a bit...with consensus taking the low through the Illinois River Valley Wednesday night into Thursday morning. The persistent frontal boundary will be stalled across the heart of central Illinois on Wednesday, and as short-wave energy approaches from the southwest, convection will re-develop along and near the front late Wednesday afternoon into Wednesday night. As has been seen over the past several forecast cycles, the strongest instability and shear will coincide further upstream from eastern Texas/Oklahoma into the Ozarks during the day Wednesday...which is where SPC has upgraded to a Slight Risk for severe weather. Further northeast, instability will be lesser across central Illinois (MUCAPE 200-400J/kg): however, shear will be strong (0-6km bulk shear 40-50kt). This may be enough to result in a few strong thunderstorm cells capable of marginally severe hail/wind gusts along and south of I-72 Wednesday evening. By the time the surface low pressure arrives later Wednesday night into Thursday morning, daytime instability will wane and the severe risk will decrease substantially.

Barnes

AVIATION

(For the 18z TAFs through 18z Tuesday Afternoon) Issued at 1123 AM CST Mon Mar 2 2026

Visible satellite reveals a sea of broken low stratus across central IL late Monday morning. Station observations indicate this is IFR south of a roughly Mt. Sterling to Decatur line, and MVFR further north, except across east-central IL (including at CMI) where drier air from the east is breaking up the clouds. These easterly winds will continue throughout the period, veering slightly to a southeasterly direction with the approach of a warm front by 18z Tuesday when showers will increase in coverage across the region.

Bumgardner

ILX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

None.


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