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Lakedale, North Carolina Weather Forecast Discussion

626
FXUS62 KRAH 060609
AFDRAH

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Raleigh NC 208 AM EDT Sat Sep 6 2025

.SYNOPSIS... A cold front to our northwest will approach this evening. The front will move through Sunday, stalling out along the coast. Cool high pressure will then follow and extend down from the Mid-Atlantic through the middle of next week.

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.NEAR TERM /TODAY THROUGH TONIGHT/... As of 208 AM Saturday...

* Warmest day of the next 7 days with upper 80s NW to low/mid 90s elsewhere. Heat indices approaching 100 along/east of US-1

* Scattered showers and storms capable of damaging straight-line winds

A deep trough with embedded shortwaves will rotate to our northwest today and tonight mainly across the OH valley and Great Lakes region. Ripples of energy rotating through the base of the larger trough will track through the Carolinas this afternoon through the overnight hours. At the surface, a pre-frontal trough will be present over the western part of NC, ahead of a cold front slated to approach later tonight from the Mid-Atlantic, OH/TN valley region.

A warm and humid airmass will be in place today, with conditions typical for July with low-level thicknesses, depending on which model you look at, upwards of 1420-1428 m, supportive of low to mid 90s. The saving grace will be storms developing in the early afternoon over the NW, favoring more upper 80s in the Triad with cloud cover developing. Although heat indices will not reach advisory criteria, they will top out near 100 along/east of US-1. And given our cool August, some people might be caught off guard with this heat we have not had for some time. Those especially sensitive to heat should take extra precautions as heat-related illnesses can occur quickly without adequate cooling or hydration.

As for storm chances today, nearly anywhere in central NC has the potential for scattered showers and storms. Much of the CAMs do suggest the best chance along/west of US-1, where instability will be higher, ranging from 1500-2500 J/kg of surface and mixed-layer CAPE. Deep-layer shear reaches upwards of 30 kt. As we have been advertising, damaging straight-line winds are the primary severe threat, especially along/west of US-1, though isolated hail is possible as well. CAMs suggest the main batch of storms will focus along the pre-frontal trough in the late afternoon and track east during the evening hours along an effective front/outflow boundary, with coverage weakening with eastward extent over the Sandhills and Coastal Plain. However, isolated development is possible east of the pre-frontal trough along possible outflow from early convection east of the Triad late last night. Thinking the main severe risk will be from about 2 to 8 pm.

The front is expected to approach the northern counties during the early morning hours of Sun. Although most CAMs suggest convection waning after midnight, cannot rule some isolated to scattered activity overnight as models suggest a few embedded mid-level MCVs/shortwaves tracking through from the SW. Lows will range from the low/mid 60s N to near 70 in the S.

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.SHORT TERM /SUNDAY AND SUNDAY NIGHT/... As of 208 AM Saturday...

Cooler with Scattered Showers/Storms Sunday

High pressure will settle south into the area as the cold front lingers near the immediate coast. The trailing upper trough and associated H8 cold front will move east across the area through the evening, supporting a chance of scattered ana-frontal showers across central NC. A few thunderstorms will also be possible across the far eastern/southeastern counties, where weak instability is forecast to develop.

The nearby front, combined with widespread clouds and rain potential, will result in a pronounced north-south temperature gradient. Highs will range from near 70 north to lower 80s southeast.

By Sunday evening and night, rain chances should gradually shift south and east of the area with the passage of the trough. Cool, dry air will filter in from the west overnight, with skies becoming mostly clear in the west and partly cloudy in the east. Lows will range from mid 50s north to lower 60s SE.

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.LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... As of 208 AM Saturday...

* Cooler Than Normal, Mainly Dry

Overview: Broad upper troughiness will prevail across the Eastern US through the period. At the surface, high pressure will extend southward along the Eastern Seaboard and into the Carolinas through mid to late week, while a frontal zone remains stalled just offshore.

Temperatures: A prolonged period of NELY low-level flow will support below-normal temperatures with gradual moderation back toward seasonable normals by the end of the work week as the high weakens and begins to break down. A moisture-starved back-door front will likely reinforce cool high pressure next weekend.

Precip chances: Rainfall will remain focused near and along the offshore frontal zone. While most of central NC will remain dry, any substantial shortwave energy ejecting east through the long wave trough could allow the western edge of the precip shield to briefly buckle inland.

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.AVIATION /06Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... As of 208 AM Saturday...

There is high confidence in VFR conditions to start the TAF period. The main concern in the immediate near-term is the potential for sub- VFR visibilities at INT this morning. While most guidance shows the potential staying west of the terminal, enough of a signal was present in the guidance to include an MVFR restriction between 10- 13z. Otherwise, the main concern for the TAF period is the development of scattered showers and storms with a pre-frontal trough and cold front Sat afternoon and evening. CAMs solutions indicate a strong clustering of storm potential over GSO/INT and RDU ahead of the surface boundary, mainly between 19 and 00-01z. For these terminals, introduced a TEMPO for IFR TSRA given the aforementioned signals. At FAY/RWI, confidence is lower given less instability, so opted for PROB30 groups between 22-03z. Outside of storms, VFR should prevail, with some gusts up to 18 kt during the day. There is the potential for some sub-VFR stratus to build in with the frontal passage, but this should hold off until Sun morning.

Outlook: Sub-VFR stratus and scattered showers/storms will be possible Sun, especially over the eastern terminals. Largely VFR should prevail thereafter, however a stalled front offshore of the SE US could favor a chance of sub-VFR conditions in showers Tue/Wed, especially over eastern terminals.

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.RAH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None.

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SYNOPSIS...Kren NEAR TERM...Kren SHORT TERM...CBL LONG TERM...CBL AVIATION...Kren

NWS RAH Office Area Forecast Discussion

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