


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Twin Cities, MN
Issued by NWS Twin Cities, MN
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006 FXUS63 KMPX 021146 AFDMPX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Twin Cities/Chanhassen MN 646 AM CDT Tue Sep 2 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Ongoing complex of storms progresses S/SE from northwest Minnesota through the morning. No severe weather expected. - A few severe storms (risk level 1 of 5) possible this afternoon/evening with the arrival of a strong cold front. - Temperatures cool down significantly midweek into the weekend, before rebounding next week. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 322 AM CDT Tue Sep 2 2025 GOES IR satellite imagery this morning shows a complex of storms traveling almost due south from northwest Minnesota. Hi-res models have been, and will likely continue to struggle with this 850mb WAA influenced convection. Spoiler, this is foreshadowing for a somewhat low confidence forecast later today. We expect the ongoing convection to continue in strength as it rides down the instability gradient, which may have it take a bit more of a southeastward path once it reaches the I-94 corridor. By then it may start to wane in strength, but 30 to 40% PoPs look reasonable for areas as far southeast as the Twin Cities metro and western Wisconsin later this morning. There`s just limited instability out there, so it may be more showery. As that activity moves out, a plume of moisture will see surface dew points rise into the low to mid 60s, allowing ~1000 to 2000 J/kg of MLCAPE to build ahead of an approaching cold front. We would expect scattered clusters of storms to initiate as low level convergence maximizes along the front, eventually forming into broken line segments. There have been some dramatic shifts in the hi-res guidance as they try to resolve this morning`s convection. Both the 00z RRFS and 06z HRRR struggle to initiate much of anything across Minnesota by the time the front reaches a line from Mankato to the Twin Cities. While these solutions do not seem as likely, they do show the complexity and lower end confidence with this particular setup. Forecast soundings show adequate 0-6km shear (~25 kts) and mid level lapse rates (6-7 C/km) to produce isolated severe wind gusts and hail with any of the stronger cells. This remains highlighted in the SPC Marginal risk (1 of 5), though the main threat area may need to be adjusted after the morning convection shows its cards. Timing for the front looks to be around 5-7PM for the St Cloud area and 8-11PM for south-central MN up through the Twin Cities metro and much of western Wisconsin. The action will continue into Wednesday, with gusty NW winds on the order of 20-30 mph, cooler temperatures into the 50s and 60s, and scattered CAA showers and storms during the afternoon. Another quick shortwave behind this front will actually shift us back into a warm sector again Thursday with a slight recovery in surface temps. More showers and storms will be possible ahead of and along this front. Friday will see temps knock right back down, with NW winds gusting to 20-30 mph again. Long range models continue to show the Canadian high lingering through the weekend, with an upper ridge finally starting to nudge the trough eastwards. We should begin to recover temps starting next week, with no large signal for precipitation under northwest flow. && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z WEDNESDAY/... Issued at 639 AM CDT Tue Sep 2 2025 Storms over central MN are expected to weaken, though persist through the morning, with a shower/TS chance coming to all but RWF & MKT this morning. Confidence remains lower on areal coverage and timing of TS initiation along the cold front late this afternoon. Hi-res models have trended toward having the greatest TS coverage with this second round over western WI. Because of that, the later TS chances were left as Prob30s at MN terminals, but bumped into a TEMPO for RNH & EAU. There will be a brief lull in precip behind the cold front, but then around 6z, the main upper wave arrives, which could lead to the redevelopment of -RA within the post frontal CAA. This would also be the period where we have our best chance at MVFR cigs. KMSP...Though expected to be on a weakening trend, shra/tsra over central MN will reach MSP shortly before 14z and persist through the rest of the morning. Not much has changed with think for the evening TS timing being best in the 1z to 4z window. There will be a treat for some MVFR cigs with the -ra potential behind the front from roughly 8z to 12z. /OUTLOOK FOR KMSP/ WED...MVFR/IFR/SHRA likely AM chc PM. Wind NW 10-15G25 kts. THU...VFR. Chc MVFR/SHRA PM. Wind W 10-20 kts. FRI...VFR. Wind NW 10-15G25 kts. && .MPX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MN...None. WI...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...BED AVIATION...MPG