758  
FXUS62 KCHS 301815  
AFDCHS  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CHARLESTON SC  
215 PM EDT SUN MAR 30 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS
 
 
RAIN AND THUNDERSTORM CHANCES INCREASE TODAY AND AGAIN MONDAY  
AHEAD OF AN APPROACHING COLD FRONT. THE FRONT COULD LINGER  
NEARBY MID-WEEK, BEFORE STRONGER HIGH PRESSURE PREVAILS LATE  
NEXT WEEK.  
 

 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/
 
 
THIS AFTERNOON: ALOFT, A WEST/SOUTHWEST FLOW WILL PREVAIL WHILE H5  
SHORTWAVE ENERGY TRAVERSES OVER THE REGION. AT THE SFC, THE LOCAL  
AREA WILL REMAIN ALONG THE WESTERN PERIPHERY OF ATLANTIC HIGH  
PRESSURE, WITH LIGHT SOUTHEAST/SOUTH WINDS OCCURRING THROUGHOUT THE  
DAY. FORCING ASSOCIATED WITH H5 SHORTWAVE ENERGY AND STRENGTHENING  
ISENTROPIC LIFT ALONG WITH A NOTABLE INCREASE IN MOISTURE (PWATS  
APPROACHING 1.5 INCHES) WILL FAVOR PRECIP SPREADING ACROSS SOUTHEAST  
GEORGIA EARLY AFTERNOON, AND POTENTIALLY INTO SOUTHEAST SOUTH  
CAROLINA LATE DAY, BUT NOT EVERYWHERE WILL RECEIVE RAIN. RECENT  
RADAR IMAGERY SUPPORTS GREATEST QPF ACROSS GEORGIA, ESPECIALLY  
INLAND AREAS. HERE 1/4 TO 1/2 INCH RAINFALL AMOUNTS ARE EXPECTED  
WITH LOCALLY HIGHER AMOUNTS POSSIBLE DURING THUNDERSTORMS. FURTHER  
NORTH, THERE IS STILL SOME EVIDENCE OF A LOW-LVL SUBSIDENCE AND  
DRIER AIR, WHICH WILL LIKELY KEEP PRECIP AMOUNTS LOWER. STRONGEST  
INSTABILITY WILL BE LOCATED ACROSS SOUTHERN AREAS, FAVORING FEW TO  
SCATTERED THUNDERSTORMS. INSTABILITY SHOULD REMAIN SOMEWHAT LIMITED  
DUE TO CLOUDS (SBCAPE 1000-1500 J/KG), MID-LVL LAPSE RATES WILL  
REMAIN WEAK, AND BULK SHEAR WILL BE RATHER MODEST (20-25 KT),  
SUGGESTING MORE LOOSELY ORGANIZED CONVECTION WITH A NEAR-ZERO THREAT  
FOR SEVERE WEATHER. HOWEVER, A FEW STRONGER THUNDERSTORMS CAN NOT BE  
RULED OUT WITH GUSTY WINDS DURING PEAK DIURNAL HEATING MID-LATE  
AFTERNOON.  
 
WARM AIR ADVECTION WILL COMPENSATE SOMEWHAT FOR THE EXTENSIVE CLOUD  
COVER, AND AS SUCH HIGH TEMPS SHOULD PEAK IN THE MID TO UPPER 70S  
AWAY FROM THE COAST. COASTAL COMMUNITIES WILL BE HELD DOWN CLOSER TO  
70 DEGREES WITH A PERSISTENT ONSHORE FLOW OFF THE COOLER OCEAN  
WATERS.  
 
TONIGHT: WITH THE PASSAGE OF A SHORT WAVE THIS EVENING, AND THE  
LOSS OF INSTABILITY WITHIN THE NOCTURNAL ENVIRONMENT, SHOWERS  
AND ANY ISOLATED T-STORMS WILL COME TO AN END FROM THE SOUTHWEST  
TO THE NORTHEAST AS THE NIGHT PROGRESSES. ADDITIONAL RAINFALL  
AMOUNTS WILL GENERALLY BE NO MORE THAN 1/10 TO 1/4 INCH. AS THE  
CONVECTION COMES TO AN END, LOW STRATUS/STRATOCUMULUS WILL  
DEVELOP, AS A LOW LEVEL WARM FRONT LIFTS NORTH-NORTHEAST  
THROUGH THE AREA. THIS ALONG WITH THE WET GROUNDS WILL LEAD TO  
AT LEAST SOME FOG FORMATION. FOR NOW WE HAVE ADDED PATCHY FOG TO  
THE ENTIRE AREA, MAINLY AFTER MIDNIGHT. LOW LEVEL WINDS MIGHT  
BE TOO STRONG FOR DENSE FOG, BUT WITH SOME CHANCE FOR SEA FOG,  
WE WILL NEED TO CLOSELY MONITOR THE SITUATION. GIVEN THE CHANCE  
FOR FOG, AND THE FACT THAT MOST AREAS WERE COOLER THAN GUIDANCE  
THE PAST TWO NIGHT TIME PERIODS, WE WENT CLOSER TO THE DEW  
POINTS FOR ACTUAL LOWS. THIS YIELDS MIN TEMPERATURES IN THE  
UPPER 50S TO NEAR 60F DEGREES.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM /MONDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/
 
 
MOST ACTIVE WEATHER DAY FOR THE SHORT/LONG TERM FALLS ON MONDAY,  
WHERE THE REGION REMAINS IN THE WARM-SECTOR WELL OUT AHEAD OF AN  
ADVANCING COLD FRONT. AREAS ALONG THE COAST MAY SEE THE CONTINUATION  
OF PATCHY TO AREAS OF SEA/LAND FOG INTO AT LEAST THE LATE MORNING  
HOURS, WITH PERSISTENT PARTLY TO MOSTLY CLOUDY SKIES EXPECTED  
THROUGH MOST OF THE DAY. DESPITE THE CLOUDY CONDITIONS, WARM-AIR  
ADVECTION IN THE LOW-MID LEVELS WILL ALLOW FOR TEMPERATURES TO RISE  
UP INTO UPPER 70S TO MID 80S, WITH DEWPOINTS REMAINING FAIRLY STEADY  
IN THE MID 60S. THIS WILL RESULT IN BUILDING INSTABILITY THROUGHOUT  
THE DAY, PEAKING IN THE 1000-2000 J/KG RANGE WITH SHEAR REMAINING  
DECENT AT AROUND 30-40 KNOTS BEFORE CIN ERODES BY THE EARLY/MID  
AFTERNOON HOURS. WHILE MOST GUIDANCE DOES NOT SHOW DIURNALLY DRIVEN  
SHOWERS/THUNDERSTORMS FORMING DUE TO CONVECTIVE TEMPERATURES NOT  
BEING REACHED, LIKELY DUE TO CLOUD COVERAGE REMAINING HIGH, CAN'T  
RULE OUT A STRAY SHOWER/STORM OUT AHEAD OF THE EXPECTED SQUALL LINE  
MOVING TOWARDS THE AREA. GIVEN MARGINAL SHEAR AND RATHER WEAK FLOW  
ALOFT, THESE STORMS LIKELY WOULDN'T ABLE TO SUSTAIN THEMSELVES FOR  
LONG, THOUGH A COLLAPSING UPDRAFT COULD RESULT IN STRONG WINDS GIVEN  
DCAPE VALES OF UP TO NEAR 1000 J/KG.  
 
THERE REMAINS TIMING DIFFERENCES AMONGST THE GLOBAL AND HIGH-  
RESOLUTION GUIDANCE, THOUGH IN THESE SCENARIOS THE HIGH-RESOLUTION  
GUIDANCE GENERALLY DOES BETTER. THE SQUALL LINE IS EXPECTED TO PUSH  
INTO OUR EASTERN GEORGIA COUNTIES (JENKINS/CANDLER/TATTNALL) BETWEEN  
2 AND 4 PM, REACHING THE I-95 CORRIDOR BETWEEN 4 AND 6 PM, AND THE  
CHARLESTON TRI-COUNTY REGION BETWEEN 6 AND 8 PM. GIVEN THE WARM  
TEMPERATURES RESULTING IN FREEZING LEVELS AT ABOUT 12 KFT, LARGE  
HAIL (> 1 INCH) MAY BE DIFFICULT TO GET REACHING THE SURFACE, THOUGH  
SMALL HAIL CAN'T BE RULED OUT. THE MAIN THREAT, AS IS COMMON WITH  
SQUALL LINE, ARE STRONG DAMAGING WIND GUSTS IN EXCESS OF 60 MPH FOR  
SECTIONS OF THE LINE THAT REMAIN PREDOMINANTLY SHEAR-BALANCED AND  
NOT UNDERCUT BY THE COLD POOL.  
 
SPC INCREASED THE RISK FOR SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE AREA INTO  
LEVEL 3 OUT OF 5, PRIMARILY DRIVEN BY THEIR UPGRADE TO 10%  
PROBABILITIES FOR TORNADOES. LOCALLY, JUST NOT CONFIDENT IN THE  
UPGRADE IN TORNADO POTENTIAL. LOOKING AT THE FIXED-LAYER STP  
PROBABILITIES FROM THE HREF, THE MEANS DECREASE AS THE STORMS  
TRAVERSE INTO EASTERN SOUTH CAROLINA AND EASTERN GEORGIA. AS WAS  
MENTIONED BEFORE, IT'S ALSO LOOKING LIKE WE'LL BE FAIRLY CLOUDY  
THROUGH MUCH OF THE DAY, WHICH WOULD MEAN WE WON'T GET THE LOW-LEVEL  
CAPE AND LAPSE RATES NEEDED FOR THE INCREASED TORNADO POTENTIAL,  
HINTED AT BY BOTH THE RAP AND HRRR SHOWING SIGTOR REMAINING IN  
THE 1-2 CATEGORY. THE HRRR NEURAL NETWORK AND CSU MLP BOTH SHOW  
A SIMILAR SCENARIO, WITH TORNADO PROBABILITIES LOWERING AS  
STORMS TRAVERSE INTO THE SOUTHEASTERN SC & GA. REGARDLESS,  
ISOLATED TO SCATTERED TORNADOES DO LOOK TO BE POSSIBLE, SO BE  
SURE TO HAVE A WAY TO RECEIVE WARNINGS AND A PLAN OF ACTION  
SHOULD A SEVERE OR TORNADO WARNING BE ISSUED FOR YOUR AREA.  
 
SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS PUSH OFF INTO THE NEAR AND OFFSHORE WATERS  
THROUGHOUT THE REST OF THE EVENING HOURS, WITH THE "COLD" FRONT  
MOVING THROUGH PRIOR TO DAYBREAK ON TUESDAY. 24 HOUR RAINFALL  
PROBABILITIES FROM THE NBM FOR 0.10" INCHES REMAIN ARE IN THE 80S  
ALONG THE COASTAL REGIONS, RISING INTO THE UPPER 80S TO LOWER 90S  
ACROSS THE INLAND AREAS. NBM PROBABILITIES FOR THE SAME REGIONS FOR  
A QUARTER INCH ARE IN THE 40S ALONG THE COAST AND 60-70S INLAND,  
WITH PROBABILITIES FOR HALF AN INCH DROPPING INTO THE 20S ALONG THE  
COAST AND 30-40 FOR INLAND AREAS.  
 
A SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE BUILDS IN FROM THE NORTH THROUGHOUT THE DAY  
ON TUESDAY, WITH UPPER LEVEL RIDGING TAKING PLACE ALOFT. HIGHS ARE A  
TOUCH COOLER, THOUGH STILL IN THE UPPER 70S TO LOWER 80S.  
 
WARM AIR ADVECTION ON WEDNESDAY MAY RESULT IN A FEW SCATTERED  
SHOWERS, THOUGH RAINFALL AMOUNTS WILL REMAIN ON THE LOW SIDE (<  
0.05"). OTHERWISE WEDNESDAY IS LOOKING TO BE PARTLY TO MOSTLY  
CLOUDY, WITH AFTERNOON HIGHS IN THE LOWER TO UPPER 80S.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY NIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY/
 
 
THE LONG TERM CONTINUES TO REMAIN LARGELY WARM AND DRY AS A STRONG  
UPPER LEVEL RIDGE SETS UP JUST OFF TO OUR SOUTH. ENSEMBLE  
SITUATIONAL AWARENESS TABLES SHOW THE STRONG UPPER LEVEL RIDGE WILL  
LIKELY PRODUCE ABNORMALLY HIGH SURFACE TEMPERATURES, WITH THE  
DETERMINISTIC NBM COMING IN MUCH CLOSER TO THE 50TH PERCENTILE OF  
AVAILABLE GUIDANCE. DAILY HIGHS IN THE MID 80S TO LOWER 90S ARE  
EXPECTED FOR INLAND AREAS THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY, WITH COASTAL  
AREAS A TOUCH COOLER IN THE UPPER 70S TO LOWER 80S. NEW RECORD DAILY  
HIGH MINIMUMS ARE WITHIN 3 DEGREES OF THE CURRENT FORECAST THURSDAY  
THROUGH SATURDAY. RECORD DAILY HIGHS ARE WITHIN 2 DEGREES ON  
SATURDAY AS THE RECORDS ARE A TOUCH COOLER, WITH THE NUMBERS TO BEAT  
BEING 89 DEGREES AT THE CHARLESTON AIRPORT AND 90 DEGREES AT THE  
SAVANNAH AIRPORT.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /18Z SUNDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/
 
 
KCHS/KJZI: VFR CONDITIONS WILL PREVAIL INTO THE AFTERNOON WITH WINDS  
GUSTING UPWARDS TO 15-20 KT RANGE. THERE REMAINS SOME RISK FOR MVFR  
CIG/VSBYS WITH SHOWER ACTIVITY NEAR THE TERMINALS THIS AFTERNOON,  
BUT PROBABILITIES REMAIN TOO LOW TO INCLUDE IN THE LATEST TAF  
ISSUANCE. HEADING INTO THE NIGHT, CIGS WILL LOWER TO AT LEAST MVFR  
BETWEEN 23-03Z, AND POSSIBLY IFR BETWEEN 08-14Z MONDAY, BEFORE  
GRADUALLY IMPROVING IN THE MVFR RANGE LATE MORNING. AT THIS TIME,  
ADDITIONAL SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY LIKELY HOLDS OFF UNTIL  
AFTER 18Z MONDAY, BUT WILL LIKELY NEED TO BE INTRODUCED IN LATER TAF  
ISSUANCES.  
 
KSAV: SHOWERS/THUNDERSTORMS ARE LIKELY TO IMPACT THE TERMINAL DURING  
THE NEXT FEW HOURS, RESULTING IN AT LEAST TEMPO MVFR CIGS/VSBYS  
BETWEEN 18-21Z. WINDS WILL ALSO BE SLIGHTLY GUSTY AT TIMES,  
GENERALLY PEAKING IN THE 15-20 KT RANGE THIS AFTERNOON. SHOWER  
AND THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY LIKELY ENDS HEADING INTO EARLY EVENING  
HOURS, BUT CIGS WILL BE LOWERING WITH TIME. AT LEAST MVFR  
CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED BY AROUND 22Z SUNDAY, FOLLOWED BY A  
PERIOD OF IFR CIGS BETWEEN 03-15Z MONDAY. FOG IS ALSO A POSSIBILITY  
OVERNIGHT. CONDITIONS SHOULD BE SLOWLY TO IMPROVE HEADING INTO  
EARLY AFTERNOON HOURS, BUT ADDITIONAL SHOWERS/THUNDERSTORMS  
LIKELY ARRIVE AFTER 18Z MONDAY. REDUCED FLIGHT RESTRICTIONS WILL  
LIKELY BE INTRODUCED AFTER 18Z MONDAY IN LATER TAF ISSUANCES.  
 
EXTENDED AVIATION OUTLOOK: FLIGHT RESTRICTIONS CONTINUE TO  
REMAIN POSSIBLE MONDAY MORNING DUE TO BOTH SEA AND LAND FOG,  
WITH MVFR AND IFR CIGS EXPECTED AS A LINE OF THUNDERSTORMS MOVES  
THROUGH MONDAY AFTERNOON INTO THE EVENING HOURS.  
 

 
   
MARINE
 
 
THIS AFTERNOON: HIGH PRESSURE CENTERED EAST OF BERMUDA WILL EXTEND  
ACROSS THE IMMEDIATE WATERS, WITH THE ASSOCIATED RIDGE AXIS JUST TO  
THE NORTH EARLY ON SAGGING SOUTH LATE DAY. THE PRESSURE GRADIENT  
REMAINS RATHER WEAK ACROSS LOCAL WATERS, BUT SUFFICIENT TO GENERATE  
SE WINDS UP TO 10-15 KT. SEAS WILL BE A MIX OF SWELLS AND WIND  
DRIVEN WAVE, RESULTING IN SIGNIFICANT WAVE HEIGHTS OF 3-5 FT ACROSS  
WATERS OUT TO 20 NM. ACROSS OUTER GEORGIA WATERS, A SMALL CRAFT  
ADVISORY IS IN PLACE FOR 6 FT SEAS UNTIL 4 PM, BUT IS BASED MAINLY  
ON MODEL CONSENSUS RATHER THAN OBSERVATIONS CLOSER TO THE COAST.  
MARINERS COULD EXPERIENCE SOME THUNDERSTORMS MID-LATE AFTERNOON,  
MAINLY SOUTH OF EDISTO. INSTABILITY AND SHEAR REMAIN ON THE LOWER  
SIDE, LIMITING THE RISK TO NEAR ZERO FOR ANY SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS.  
KEEP IN MIND THOUGH THAT LIGHTNING STRIKES WILL OCCUR.  
 
TONIGHT: THE ATLANTIC HIGH PULLS FURTHER EAST, AS A COLD FRONT  
DROPS INTO THE TENNESSEE AND LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS. WINDS  
TURN MORE SOUTHERLY, BUT ONCE AGAIN NO GREATER THAN 10 OR 15 KT,  
WHILE SEAS ARE 5 FEET OR LESS. LINGERING T-STORMS EARLY ON WILL  
COME TO AN END, FOLLOWED BY THE RISK FOR SEA FOG, WITHIN A WARM  
AND MOIST AIR MASS ATOP THE SOMEWHAT COOLER WATERS. WE HAVE  
INCLUDED PATCHY FOG IN THE FORECAST AS A A RESULT, AND WE'LL  
MAINTAIN A WEATHER WATCH FOR POSSIBLE DENSE FOG AND A DENSE FOG  
ADVISORY.  
 
MONDAY/TUESDAY: MODELS SHOW AT LEAST PATCHY SEA FOG CONTINUING INTO  
THE EARLY AFTERNOON HOURS, THOUGH BREEZY SOUTHEAST GRADIENT WINDS  
OUT AHEAD OF AN APPROACHING COLD FRONT DROPS CONFIDENCE A TOUCH.  
WIND SPEEDS CONTINUE TO REMAIN JUST BELOW SMALL CRAFT CRITERIA, WITH  
CHANCES FOR 6 FOOT WAVES CONTINUING IN THE OFFSHORE GA WATERS,  
THOUGH IT LOOKS TO REMAIN CONFINED TO A SMALL ENOUGH PORTION OF THE  
ZONE TO AVOID ISSUING A SMALL CRAFT ADVISORY AT THIS TIME.  
 
AFTERNOON SCATTERED SHOWERS AND ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS ARE EXPECTED  
TO PUSH THROUGH INTO THE EARLY OVERNIGHT HOURS ON TUESDAY. WINDS  
WILL BE STARTING OUT OF THE WEST DURING THE MORNING, VEERING TO THE  
NORTH-NORTHEAST IN THE AFTERNOON, AND CONTINUING TO VEER TO THE EAST  
INTO THE EVENING HOURS.  
 
WEDNESDAY: SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE BUILDS IN FROM THE NORTH, RESULTING  
IN EAST WINDS BECOMING SOUTHEASTERLY THROUGHOUT THE DAY. MAY SEE SOME  
ISOLATED SHOWERS DEVELOP, THOUGH CONFIDENCE REMAINS LOW AT THIS  
TIME WITH PROBABILITIES FOR RAIN IN THE 20-30% RANGE.  
 
THURSDAY: WARM AND DRY CONDITIONS RETURN.  
 

 
   
EQUIPMENT
 
 
THE KCLX RADAR REMAINS OFFLINE FOR DOME MAINTENANCE THROUGH  
APRIL 1, 2025. RADAR DATA WILL NOT BE AVAILABLE DURING THIS  
TIME. USERS ARE URGED TO USE ADJACENT WSR-88D SITES WHICH ALSO  
COVER MUCH OF SOUTHEAST SOUTH CAROLINA, SOUTHEAST GEORGIA AND  
THE ADJACENT COASTAL WATERS. THESE INCLUDE:  
 
KCAE - COLUMBIA, SC  
KLTX - WILMINGTON, NC  
KJAX - JACKSONVILLE, FL  
KVAX - MOODY AFB, GA  
KJGX - ROBBINS AFB, GA  
 

 
   
CHS WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
GA...NONE.  
SC...NONE.  
MARINE...SMALL CRAFT ADVISORY UNTIL 4 PM EDT THIS AFTERNOON FOR AMZ374.  
 

 
 

 
 
NEAR TERM...DPB  
SHORT TERM...  
LONG TERM...  
AVIATION...DPB  
MARINE...DPB  
 
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