


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Central Illinois
Issued by NWS Central Illinois
Versions:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
390 FXUS63 KILX 172328 AFDILX Area Forecast Discussion...Updated Aviation National Weather Service Lincoln IL 628 PM CDT Thu Jul 17 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - A few strong thunderstorms are possible this afternoon...with a 5-15% chance for damaging wind gusts along and south of I-70. - An active weather pattern will develop this weekend, resulting in daily chances for thunderstorms Friday night through Monday. Severe weather and locally heavy rainfall will be possible. - Heat and humidity will build next week...with heat index values soaring well above 100 degrees Tuesday through Thursday. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 127 PM CDT Thu Jul 17 2025 ...Severe Weather Risk This Afternoon... The latest Day 1 Convective Outlook from SPC highlights locations along/south of I-70 for a Marginal Risk (5-15% chance) for severe weather today. 17z/1pm surface analysis shows a cold front along I-70: however, regional satellite/radar mosaic indicates the primary forcing for widespread thunderstorms appears to be a bit further south along the Ohio River where a few clusters of strong convection have already developed. Current mesoanalysis shows MLCAPEs of greater than 1000J/kg along/south of I-70 which are expected to increase to greater than 2000J/kg in the next few hours. Mitigating factor for severe weather will once again be a lack of deep-layer shear as 0-6km values will remain under 20kt across this area. CAMs generally show scattered showers/storms forming along/south of I-72 this afternoon...with the greatest areal coverage across the far SE KILX CWA. This makes sense given current synoptic/mesoscale set-up...so have focused likely PoPs along/south of I-70 from mid-afternoon into the early evening. Isolated damaging wind gusts of 50-60mph will be possible with the strongest cells. ...Active Weather This Weekend... The cold front will settle southward and stall near the I-64 corridor tonight through Friday. As a result, think the northern two-thirds of the CWA will remain mostly dry on Friday...with better rain chances confined to locations along/south of a Rushville to Robinson line. As a short-wave trough skirts through the Northern Plains into the Great Lakes, it will nudge the boundary back northward into the area Friday night into Saturday and provide the necessary forcing for an uptick in convective coverage. Questions still remain as to how organized the convection will become and its exact timing. The 12z HRRR suggests an MCS may develop ahead of the trough across Minnesota/Iowa late Friday night, then spill into at least north-central Illinois by Saturday morning. Meanwhile other models such as the GFS are not as bullish with the possible MCS, but develop numerous showers/storms near the frontal zone both Friday night and Saturday. Will need to monitor later CAMs regarding the possible MCS, but for now will increase PoPs to likely Friday night into Saturday. After that, additional nocturnal convection may develop both Saturday night and Sunday night. Early projections suggest the Saturday night into Sunday morning storms may focus along/north of I-74...while the Sunday night into Monday morning convection may be across the heart of central Illinois. This will be a largely mesoscale-driven event, so the details regarding the individual waves of convection will likely shift slightly with subsequent forecast packages. For now, suffice it to say the weekend will be unsettled at times...with the potential for severe weather and locally heavy rainfall. The SPC Day 3 outlook places all of central and southeast Illinois under a Marginal Risk (5-15% chance) for severe weather on Saturday...while WPC highlights locations along/north of I-74 with a Slight Risk (15% or greater chance) for excessive rainfall. The Slight Risk for excessive rainfall spreads southward across the entire CWA for Sunday. Initial projections suggest rainfall of 1-2 inches along and northeast of a Galesburg...to Lincoln...to Lawrenceville line. Given the recent dry conditions, the rainfall will be quite beneficial: however, excessive rainfall rates within the stronger storms may lead to scattered flash flooding of urban areas and low-lying spots prone to flooding. ...Building Heat Next Week... The upper ridge is progged to steadily strengthen this weekend and by early next week will shift the "ring of fire" northward into the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes. As a result, rain chances will decrease on Monday...then will disappear by Tuesday and Wednesday. Thanks to rising upper heights, lesser rain chances, and more sunshine...temperatures will climb into the lower 90s by Tuesday and into the middle 90s by Wednesday. Given the expected rainfall this weekend, the moist soils and actively growing crops will contribute to dewpoints in the upper 70s and perhaps lower 80s in a few spots. This will likely push heat index values well above 100 degrees and into Heat Advisory/Warning territory by next Tuesday through Thursday. Barnes && .AVIATION... (For the 00z TAFs through 00z Friday Evening) Issued at 616 PM CDT Thu Jul 17 2025 A nearby frontal boundary will contribute to MVFR ceilings or lower tonight, primarily near and south of the I-72 terminals (KSPI/KDEC/KCMI). Further north at KPIA & KBMI, short-term forecast guidance has trended more optimistic, with mostly VFR ceilings through the overnight period. Conditions will gradually improve to VFR across the board by late Friday morning as the lower ceilings lift and break with the northward surge of the front. MJA && .ILX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$