


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Chicago, IL
Issued by NWS Chicago, IL
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067 FXUS63 KLOT 042006 AFDLOT Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Chicago/Romeoville, IL 306 PM CDT Fri Jul 4 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Hot on Saturday but not as oppressively humid as the previous rounds of heat recently (~95-100F heat indices). - More appreciable thunderstorm chances return Saturday night and Sunday with a slowly approaching cold front. There may be a day or two of quieter weather to start next work week before thunderstorm chances return midweek. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 306 PM CDT Fri Jul 4 2025 Through Saturday Night: An MCV continues to shift south-southeastward across southern Lake Michigan as of this writing. While the convective activity has waned with this feature, lingering cloud cover has acted to mute diurnal heating across much of far northeastern IL through the early afternoon following the passage of an early morning outflow boundary. This outflow boundary stalled near the Kankakee River Valley late this morning, and has since begin to shift back northward. There have been a few recent developing showers over southern Lake Michigan along the southern periphery of this MCV. However, the activity has largely remained lightning free with a low centroid, likely owing to the poor mid-level lapse rates. However, in spite of the poor mid-level lapse rates, we cannot rule out a few developing storms mid to late afternoon in advance of the MCV. If this occurs(about a 20% chance at this point), this would be especially the case across southeastern sections of the area, mainly near and south of the Kankakee Valley in east central IL and northwestern IN. The small storm threat is expected to end by sunset this evening. Conditions are expected to remain dry and very warm tonight, with lows remaining in the mid to upper 70s in the heart of the Chicago urban heat island. Southwesterly winds will increase through the morning hours of Saturday, with wind gusts up to 30 mph expected during the afternoon. High temperatures will be very warm Saturday, with readings in the low to mid 90s and heat indices a couple of degrees warmer. Strong to potentially severe thunderstorms are likely to develop west-northwest of our area along an approaching cold front Saturday afternoon. Some of these storms may make it into northwestern IL late in the afternoon and into the evening (4 pm to 9 pm), and any that do during this time will have the potential to produce locally strong damaging wind gusts and locally heavy rainfall. The storms are likely to be in a weakening phase as they shift into parts of northern IL into the evening hours, so the severe threat is expected to decrease with eastern extent across northern IL. Currently, the most favored area for any strong late day/evening storms is primarily northwest of a line from Mendota to Hebron. The severe threat may wane later Saturday evening and night, but with the cold front moving into the area, low end chances (20-40%) for scattered showers and storms will continue. The main threat with any storms Saturday night would be locally heavy rainfall given the high precipitable water values (~2"). This threat is expected to continue into Sunday. KJB Sunday through Friday: A mid-level wave passing just north of Lake Superior on Saturday will drag a weak cold front across the forecast area late Saturday night through Monday night. With deep-layer flow aligned parallel to the surface front, primary forcing on Sunday will be limited to the right-entrace of an upper jet streak, any remnant small convective impulses, and diurnal surface-based processes. Expectations are that scattered showers and perhaps a few embedded thunderstorms around the front Sunday morning will increase in coverage and intensity Sunday afternoon and evening, with the higher coverage areas near and southeast of I-55. Moisture pooling along the front will increase PWATs to around 2". Combining that with slow storm motions from generally weak deep-layer flow, locally heavy rain is possible. The cold front is expected to clear the CWA to the south no later than Monday morning as a weak surface ridge builds across the western Great Lakes. This will favor dry conditions with notably less humidity for much of the area on Monday. Similar conditions should persist through the day on Tuesday as consensus guidance stalls the front well south of the area. Persistent onshore and stronger gradient flow behind the front may also result in higher waves and dangerous swimming conditions on Monday. A low-amplitude trough drifting across the Upper Mississippi River Valley on Wednesday will then bring increasing chances for showers and some storms on Wednesday and possibly into Thursday. Kluber && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z SUNDAY/... Issued at 1213 PM CDT Fri Jul 4 2025 The area of remnant showers continues to dissipate across the area early this afternoon, with only some lingering VFR cloud cover. This area of cloud cover will scatter through the afternoon as the ongoing southeasterly winds turn south- southwesterly. Currently anticipate this south-southwestern wind shift to occur in the 19 to 20Z timeframe at the main terminals. The weather tonight is expected to be quiet, though smoke from area fireworks emissions may result in a few hour period of MVFR VSBYs later this evening into the overnight. The previous forecast had this handled, so I made no changes to this for the 18Z TAFs. Otherwise, expect southwest winds to increase on Saturday, with gusts up to 20-25 kt expected Saturday afternoon. KJB && .LOT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... IL...Air Quality Alert until midnight CDT tonight for ILZ005-ILZ006- ILZ012-ILZ013-ILZ020-ILZ021-ILZ103-ILZ104-ILZ105-ILZ106- ILZ107-ILZ108. IN...Air Quality Alert until midnight EDT tonight for INZ019. LM...Small Craft Advisory from 1 PM to 8 PM CDT Saturday for the IL nearshore waters. && $$ Visit us at weather.gov/chicago