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Sharpsburg, North Carolina Weather Forecast Discussion

043
FXUS62 KRAH 070554
AFDRAH

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Raleigh NC 155 AM EDT Sun Sep 7 2025

.SYNOPSIS... A cold front will move through the area this morning. The front will then settle off the coast of the southeastern United States into the middle of the week as cool high pressure extends into the area from the Mid-Atlantic.

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.NEAR TERM /TODAY AND TONIGHT/... As of 155 AM Sunday...

* Much cooler today with below normal highs, warmest in the early part of the day * Cloud cover slow to erode with a moist post-frontal NE flow * A few patchy showers around into midday, but storms should mainly reside east of the area

The surface cold front is still tucked west of the Appalachians of NC and VA. The majority of the shower activity has waned considerably in the last few hours as the effective front has pushed well east of the area and stabilized the atmosphere. Plenty of low and mid-layer clouds will continue to overspread the area as the upper-trough is still to our west and the 850/700 mb frontal position will be slow to move through until late tonight to early Mon.

The cold front will edge south and through the area this morning across the north, to early afternoon in the far SE, eventually reaching the coast this evening. The front will then settle offshore of the SE US later tonight as cool 1027 mb high pressure edges southward from the OH valley.

It will be a much cooler day today compared to yesterday, by some 15- 20 degrees in the upper 60s to near 70 in the north to the low 80s in the SE. Our warmest temperatures should be felt this morning just along and south of the front. As the front moves through, temperatures could drop into the 60s along/north of US-64 as suggested by some high-res models. Otherwise, expect plenty of low stratus with a moist post-frontal NE flow, at times gusting to 15-20 mph in the SE. The low clouds will be slow to erode, earliest to lift in the NW Piedmont and slowest in the southeast. As for rain chances, isolated to scattered rain/showers are possible this morning and early afternoon mainly along/north of US-64 with the 850/700 mb front and trough overhead. This afternoon, instability largely focuses east of the area. The latest HREF shows the best chance of storms along and just inland of the immediate coast. We have kept 30-percent PoPs in the Sandhills and Coastal Plain, however.

Low nd high clouds should finally clear out tonight with high pressure building into the area. Overnight lows will dip into the low/mid 50s in the north and near 60 in the south. Some spots in the far north could dip into the upper 40s.

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.SHORT TERM /MONDAY THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT/... As of 155 AM Sunday...

* Dry, Breezy, and Cool

Underneath broad upper troughing, parent surface high centered over the Northeast US and New England will be the dominate weather feature as it extends southward along much of the Eastern Seaboard. While some cloud cover may linger across the far eastern zones, highs Monday afternoon will range from 75 to 80, about 4-8 degrees below normal for early September. A modestly pinched gradient between the high and a stalled offshore front will support NELY gusts of 15 to 25 mph, with comfortable humidity levels as BL dewpoints mix out into the upper 40s and 50s. Lows Monday night will generally fall into the 50s, though some lower 60s are possible across the SE counties where increasing/thickening cirrus spreads in from the east.

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.LONG TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... As of 155 AM Sunday...

* Cooler Than Normal, Mainly Dry

Overview: Broad upper troughing will persist across the Eastern US through the period. At the surface, high pressure will extend southward along the Eastern Seaboard and into the Carolinas through mid to late week, while a frontal zone wavers offshore.

Temperatures: A prolonged period of NELY low-level flow will support below-normal temperatures with gradual moderation back toward seasonable normals by the end of the work week as the high weakens and begins to break down. A dry back-door cold front will approach late-week, followed by renewed high pressure next weekend.

Precip chances: Shortwave energy embedded within the long wave trough may temporarily force the offshore frontal zone to retrograde westward towards the immediate coast Tuesday-Wedneday, potentially resulting in some light rain across the far eastern zones. The front will then shift back offshore Thursday, reinforcing dry conditions. Otherwise, the extended period will remain mostly dry.

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.AVIATION /06Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... As of 155 AM Sunday...

A mixture of IFR to VFR conditions are expected to start the TAF period. Storm activity has exited the region, but a few lingering areas of light rain are possible across GSO, INT, and RDU into mid- morning Sun. Otherwise, guidance suggests a gradual lowering of ceilings into early Sun as low-level moisture from earlier showers saturates the near-surface layer. Areas of IFR to MVFR conditions are expected into mid-morning. A brief period of LIFR conditions is possible in either patchy fog and/or very low ceilings prior to sunrise Sun. Confidence is not overly high but given weak winds prior to frontal passage, felt there was enough potential to include in the forecast. A gradual rise in ceilings is favored in the morning and afternoon, but MVFR is forecast to be slower to erode in a moist post-frontal NE flow. A return to VFR is expected between 17- 20z in the NW to 22 to 00z in the SE, slowest at FAY/RWI and earliest at GSO/INT. Some isolated showers are possible Sun, but the majority of coverage should reside east of the terminals.

Outlook: A return to VFR should take hold Sun night. Largely VFR should prevail into much of the upcoming week, however a stalled front offshore of the SE US could favor a chance of sub-VFR conditions in showers Tue and Wed.

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.RAH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None.

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SYNOPSIS...Kren NEAR TERM...Kren SHORT TERM...CBL LONG TERM...CBL AVIATION...Kren

NWS RAH Office Area Forecast Discussion

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