398
FXUS61 KOKX 262325
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
725 PM EDT Thu Sep 26 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
A cold front slowly pushes through the region tonight. High pressure
briefly noses in during Friday before giving way to a complex
frontal boundary to the south Friday night. High pressure will then
build again slowly late Saturday through early next week. Low
pressure passes to the south Tuesday into Wednesday, followed by a
frontal passage late Wednesday into next Thursday.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH FRIDAY/...
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Forecast updated to adjust PoPs down initially this evening as there is very little shower activity. This is only temporary as the cold front should help increase coverage of showers from north to south after 9-10pm. There is some weak instability and have maintained a slight chance of thunder with the shower activity preceding and right along the cold front. While there will be a wind shift with the front, the overall flow is weak so will include patchy fog late tonight into early Friday morning. PoPs trail off from N to SE across the area after 6z as the front progresses south. Additional rainfall amounts should vary between a tenth up to a half inch, with the half inch amounts likely confined across north and northeastern zones. With clouds and higher dew points expect very little temperatures spread once again, with temperatures primarily in the 60s for lows as dew points are also expected to be in the 60s. During Friday the area will be on the southern edge of a 500 mb confluence zone with a NW flow aloft attempting to get established. However, this feature is no longer progged to get as far south as it was a few days ago and continues to trend further north and northeast with subsequent model runs. There should be enough of a push of surface high pressure into the Lake Ontario region during the day Friday to keep the region primarily dry as BUFKIT soundings have pockets of dry air throughout the column. With a lack of lift it should remain primarily dry. Have maintained slight chance PoPs along the southern periphery of the CWA more for continuity purposes, but the theme here is it stays dry during the day, but with clouds lingering. Expect a mostly cloudy Friday as BUFKIT sounding consensus is suggestive of 3 different cloud layers with a low, low-mid, and high deck. The winds are expected to be weak, with light winds mainly onshore. Temperatures will be running near normal with highs in the lower and middle 70s.
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&& .SHORT TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY/... Friday night should be primarily dry for much of the first half of the night. After 6z Saturday the confluence zone aloft gets further away to the northeast and the chances for light rain / showers and sprinkles will increase from southwest to northeast. Towards daybreak introduce likely POPs for mainly southwestern portions of the area as an occluded and complex boundary down to the south inches a bit closer. Have PoPs trailing off some heading ENE across the area. Forecast soundings show the lower 10-15 kft moistening into early Saturday. Look for Saturday to be unsettled with pockets of light rain pivoting through from time to time. An easterly flow picks up some towards late morning and afternoon, so not the best of fall days. Expect periods of rain / showers, with the relatively higher chance of rain further to the southwest. There remains uncertainty regarding how much to the northeast the closed upper level low feature to the southwest over the Ohio and Tennessee Valley can ultimately get. This will ultimately determine how unsettled the first half of the weekend gets as there remains a fair amount of guidance that keeps the mid levels dry, with only the lowest 5-7 kft remaining moist with relatively higher RH. Late in the day and evening high pressure from the north will attempt to nose south once again. && .LONG TERM /SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/... The overall forecast thinking has not changed much in the long term and continued to stay close to the consensus forecast using the latest NBM. The region will lie between two upper level lows this weekend, one across the Tennessee and Ohio Valleys and one near the Canadian Maritimes. Ridging will lie over the northeast between the two lows. The upper low to our west will slowly weaken and slide east towards the Middle Atlantic coast early next week with the second low moving further offshore. The guidance is still differing in the speed and handling of the upper low to the west, but the overall impact to the region will be minimal. Despite the differences, there should be weak surface low development just off the Middle Atlantic sometime Monday night into Tuesday. The low then slides south and east of the area through Wednesday. The 12z guidance is starting to come into better agreement with the low far enough from the coast to limit how much precip could make into the area. NBM deterministic PoPs are still in chance category and this seems reasonable given the uncertainty this far out with the evolution of the upper levels. The other feature will be continued high pressure ridging down across the northeast Saturday night through at least Tuesday. The high should begin to weaken on Wednesday in response to a progressive northern stream trough approaching the from the west. An associated front will move across sometime late Wednesday into Thursday, likely weakening as it moves towards the coast. Warm advection showers will continue trying to push north into the southern half of the area Saturday night into Sunday. The main negating factor will be increasingly dry subcloud air associated with the high over northern New England building southward. Do not want to completely rule out a few spots getting a trace to a hundredth or so of rain near the coast Saturday night into early Sunday and have maintained low PoPs with this forecast package. The surface ridging should take over late Sunday into Monday with mainly dry conditions before chances for showers exists Tuesday into midweek due to the offshore low and expected frontal passage. Sky conditions should remain mostly cloudy for much of the period. The atmosphere should dry out considerably once the front passes mid- late week. Temperatures look to remain close to normal levels. && .AVIATION /00Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/...
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A trough of low pressure will be nearby into early evening, then a cold front passes through later tonight. Categories lowering to IFR tonight with more showers possible. Improvement to MVFR Friday morning, then probably VFR Friday late morning or early afternoon. S winds around 10kt, becoming lighter and veering more SW this evening. Winds are then likely to go light and variable for a time as the cold front settles south across the area tonight before becoming light N to NE. Winds becoming easterly on Friday 5-10kt. ...NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty... Timing of lowering back to IFR tonight may be off by an hour or two and then improvement timing Friday morning/afternoon may be off by a few hours. OUTLOOK FOR 00Z SATURDAY THROUGH TUESDAY... Friday PM: Mainly VFR. Saturday: Mostly MVFR. A chance of IFR and showers, especially for the city terminals. Sunday: MVFR/VFR. Monday: VFR. Tuesday: MVFR/IFR with a chance of showers. Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts, can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90
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&& .MARINE... Small craft seas are expected to subside closer to 4 ft for the western and central ocean waters towards midnight, and lingering a bit longer into the early morning out on the eastern ocean. Sub small craft conditions follow for Friday through Friday night as the winds become more easterly. There is an increasing chance of small craft conditions returning into the day Saturday out on the ocean, particularly the western ocean as 5 ft seas return along with marginal small craft gusts with an increasing easterly flow. Winds should largely remain below SCA levels Saturday night through Tuesday. Seas around 5 ft are possible Saturday night before subsiding to around 4 ft Sunday night into Monday. Seas build back to 5-6 ft Monday night into Tuesday with the development of low pressure offshore. && .HYDROLOGY... There are no hydrologic concerns through the middle of next week. && .TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...
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There is a moderate rip current risk Friday as swells subside a bit with weaker winds. The risk may start out moderate Saturday before becoming high in the afternoon as seas and swells build along with a stronger easterly flow.
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&& .OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
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CT...None. NY...None. NJ...None. MARINE...Small Craft Advisory until 6 AM EDT Friday for ANZ350. Small Craft Advisory until midnight EDT tonight for ANZ353-355.
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&& $$ SYNOPSIS...JE/DS NEAR TERM...JE/DS SHORT TERM...JE LONG TERM...DS AVIATION...JT MARINE...JE/DS HYDROLOGY...JE/DS TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...DS