Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Binghamton, NY

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572
FXUS61 KBGM 031911
AFDBGM

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Binghamton NY
311 PM EDT Wed Jul 3 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
Breezy, warm, and dry conditions will continue this afternoon.
A weakening front will move through the region tonight into
Thursday morning bringing scattered rain showers and isolated
thunderstorms. Scattered showers and storms will be possible
again for Independence Day, but coverage will be limited to
Northeast Pennsylvania and the Catskills.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/...
215 PM Update...
A weak cold front will push its way through Central NY and NE
PA tonight, bringing chances for showers and storms. This front
is pretty weak, so chance for storm development is rather low,
and the best chances for some thunder will be mainly in NE PA
and the Catskills. Chances for showers will linger into
Independence Day, but mainly remain over NE PA and the
Catskills. Temperatures expected in the mid to upper 80s
tomorrow, with tonight`s overnight lows in the low 60s to low
70s, and Thursday`s overnight lows in the low to upper 60s.
Precipitation amounts tonight through Independence Day is
expected to be between a tenth to a quarter of an inch of rain.
Any shower or storm that passes over an area may have a short
duration of heavier downpours with localized greater amounts.

&&

.SHORT TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT/...
305 PM Update...
Our next chance of showers and thunderstorms will focus on
Friday night into Saturday. There is some uncertainty for
whether a few stronger cells may be involved, as well as locally
heavy rainfall.

Friday a surface low in the western Great Lakes deepens and
moves east with a warm front lifting into the region. The warm
air advection looks weak initially so despite some lift, it does
not look like enough forcing is in place to get much more than
a few isolated to scattered thunderstorms going during the day
Friday. However, it will be quite warm and humid, with heat
index values reaching into lower-mid 90s for much of the area,
and especially in the Wyoming Valley of PA.

As was already mentioned in the previous version of the
discussion, better dynamics move in Friday evening and
overnight with better lift as another warm front moves in with
better chances of showers and thunderstorms. Shear looks to be
good overnight with near 50 knots of 0-6 km shear but forecast
soundings show stable air near the surface and elevated CAPE
staying below 1000 J/kg with a low equilibrium level so severe
thunderstorms are unlikely overnight. Precipitable water values
will be over 1.5 inches and could approach 2 inches so heavy
rainfall will be likely with showers and thunderstorms that do
develop. Storm motions will be 20 to 30 knots so that will limit
residence time of the higher rain rates but any training could
lead to isolated/localized flash flooding potential Friday
night into Saturday morning. The nocturnal timing of this
frontal system brings into question how much instability can
actually be realized, but the dynamics may provide the boost
that would be needed.

The surface low passes north of the Region Saturday with a
front dragging through NY and PA. Models are trending a bit
faster with the exit of the front which may allow much of the
area to actually dry out after the Friday night-early Saturday
activity. That said, still some uncertainty in timing and thus
we still hang on to some chances of showers and storms
especially east of I-81. Pretty confident though that we dry out
Saturday night as high pressure builds into the region.

&&

.LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
305 PM Update...
After a quiet Sunday, we may enter a more active pattern towards
the middle of next week as heat and humidity interact with
passing waves.

High pressure visits during the second half of the weekend with
a pleasant day Sunday; highs of mid 70s-mid 80s with
comfortable dewpoints.

Heat and humidity build quickly Monday into Tuesday via
southwest flow on the edge of a ridge. With upper jet in
vicinity and likely passing shortwaves, there will probably be
triggers for convection Tuesday-Wednesday with heat and humidity
available as fuel plus shear from the strong flow aloft.

&&

.AVIATION /19Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH MONDAY/...
VFR conditions are expected through the majority of the 18Z TAF
period. Current southerly gusty winds at the majority of
terminals will taper off through this evening. A frontal
boundary will bring rain and lowered ceilings to all CNY
terminals overnight. Scattered showers and potentially isolated
thunderstorms move in from the northwest after 00z. Visibilities
may also be reduced if a heavier shower were to pass directly
over a terminal. If showers reach AVP, it will be towards the
end of this TAF period, but confidence is currently too low to
include in this TAF package.

Southerly winds will be quite strong today with sustained speeds
exceeding 10 kts and peak gusts of 20 to 25 kts. Winds will
become calmer tonight. Guidance continues to bring low-level
wind shear for RME for a couple hours between 02-04Z, so it`s
been included in this TAF package.

Outlook...

Wednesday night through Saturday Night...More unsettled pattern
with chances of showers and thunderstorms with associated
restrictions.

Sunday and Monday...Mainly VFR.

&&

.BGM WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
PA...None.
NY...None.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...KL
NEAR TERM...KL
SHORT TERM...MDP
LONG TERM...AJG/MDP
AVIATION...KL


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