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Liberty, North Carolina Weather Forecast Discussion

144
FXUS62 KRAH 051455
AFDRAH

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Raleigh NC 1055 AM EDT Fri Sep 5 2025

.SYNOPSIS... A cold front approaching from the northwest will stall out and hold to our northwest through Saturday, allowing warmer air to flow into the region. The front will finally push into the area Sunday, with cooler high pressure then building in from the north for Sunday night through Wednesday.

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.NEAR TERM /TODAY THROUGH TONIGHT/... As of 200 AM Friday...

Many parts of the Triad received one-quarter to one-half inch of rain yesterday afternoon/evening, and fog appears likely to occur across that part of the forecast area, some of which could be dense. While there is a weak surface trough across central North Carolina, where showers are currently falling across the southern part of the state, the primary surface feature remains to the north. As of midnight, the front extends south through Quebec into New York and southwest into Kentucky. While that front will fade apart today, another cold front will move east with a surface low moving northeast over the Great Lakes. The second front will approach the Appalachians tonight, but precipitation will not reach any farther east overnight. With mostly sunny skies and southwesterly flow continuing, highs will rise a few additional degrees compared to yesterday, ranging from the mid 80s to the mid 90s. Tonight will likely be the warmest night out of the next seven nights in most locations, ranging from the mid 60s to the low 70s.

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.SHORT TERM /SATURDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT/... As of 1055 AM Friday...

* Scattered showers/storms Sat afternoon will be capable of damaging straight-line winds.

The core of the main mid/upper low will remain well north of central NC as it pivots across the Great Lakes and lower Ohio Valley through 12z Sun. However, at the base of the trough, an area of convectively perturbed disturbances is expected to shift across the Southeast and across the area Sat afternoon through the overnight hours. This area will likely be riddled with small scale MCV`s that will act as localized areas of lift and bring initially storm chances through the afternoon and transition to areas of rain with embedded showers overnight into Sun morning.

At the surface, continued warm/moist southerly advection off the Atlantic will support surface dew points in the mid/upper 60s to around 70 by Sat afternoon. Abundant sunshine through early afternoon should allow diurnal heating to result in 1000-1500 J/kg of SBCAPE with little inhibition. Scattered convection will likely develop along a pre-frontal trough axis and/or remnant outflow boundary stretching northeast-southwest across the Piedmont co- located within the greater 0-3km instability plume. Additionally, any ongoing convection over the TN Valley will be moving east and should move into the western Piedmont through late afternon. Storm organization should be limited to loosely organized multicell clusters with deep-layer shear 20-30 kts, but the kinematic profile is extremely erratic which should limit storm organization to cold- pool dynamics, which should be relatively favorable with DCAPE > 900 and low-level lapse rates > 8.5 C/km. The main concern will be isolated straight-line damaging wind gusts, with more-or-less equal chances anywhere across central NC.

Saturday will also likely be the warmest day this weekend with low- level thicknesses around 1420m, which is 20-25m greater than normal, and should support highs in the upper 80s to low/mid 90s by early afternoon. Individuals who are especially sensitive to heat should take extra precautions as heat-related illness can occur quickly without adequate cooling or hydration available, especially if spending extended time outside and in the direct sunlight.

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.LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... As of 1055 AM Friday...

* Transition to well below normal temperatures through Wednesday.

* Gradual warming back to near normal late week.

The surface cold front will begin to work its way across central NC early Sun morning through the early afternoon when it is forecast to be moving into SC. Precipitation chances will remain possible along the front and the humid airmass preceding the fropa, but poor diurnal timing will keep thunder and severe chances extremely limited. Considerable amount of cloud cover, and lingering light rain, along and behind the cold front into Sun afternoon will likely keep temperatures well below normal for a majority of central NC outside of very near the front into southeast NC and near the NC/SC border.

Sun night-Thu: The mid level trough will shift into the Mid Atlantic region Sun night but quickly dampen and lift NE into E Canada, as a weaker and baggier trough then digs to our W, from the Upper Midwest through the Miss Valley, through Wed, keeping us in a weak SSW steering flow. This baggy trough will then lift into the Ohio Valley and then, as central Canadian shortwaves dive into its base, will amplify into a stronger trough over the Great Lakes region and SE Canada by Thu. At the surface, we`ll remain under the influence of the surface high, nosing down through central NC as its center tracks from IN across OH, Lake Erie, NY, New England, then off the Canadian Maritimes Sun night through Wed. Generally dry weather is expected for our area Sun night through Tue, save an isolated shower or two in S Sampson county, then models suggest that the old frontal zone off the SE coast will nudge inland Tue night into Wed, as the exiting surface high results in a narrowing and weakening ridge in our area. This will bring a chance of showers and isolated storms to the I-95 corridor Wed, just as the baggy mid level trough approaches our area and scrapes over W and N NC. The cool surface ridge will be largely gone by Thu, replaced by a warmer air mass with thicknesses rebounding back toward normal. The next cold front, attending the aforementioned deepening mid level trough over the Great Lakes Thu, will likely push into the Ohio Valley and Northeast states late Thu, but we should stay in the mild air through Thu. Highs will be in the mid 70s to low 80s Mon-Wed, then 80 to 85 Thu. Lows through this period will be mostly in the mid 50s to low 60s.

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.AVIATION /10Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/... As of 600 AM Friday...

TAF period: LIFR conditions at INT/GSO should scatter out by mid morning with wind out of the southwest at 5-10 kt. VFR conditions are expected through the TAF period at RDU/FAY/RWI with light southerly wind. While some models are suggesting the potential for fog across eastern North Carolina around sunrise on Saturday, recent model trends are showing that the fog would likely develop to the east of FAY/RWI.

Outlook: A slow moving cold front will bring the chance for restrictions and showers to all terminals Saturday and Sunday. By Monday, dry VFR conditions should resume.

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

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SYNOPSIS...Hartfield NEAR TERM...Green SHORT TERM...Swiggett LONG TERM...Swiggett/Hartfield AVIATION...Green

NWS RAH Office Area Forecast Discussion

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