764
FXUS63 KGRR 161839
AFDGRR
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Grand Rapids MI
239 PM EDT Sat May 16 2026
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Thunderstorm potential returns Sunday and lasts through Tuesday
- Mostly dry and cooler Wednesday and beyond
&&
.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 239 PM EDT Sat May 16 2026
- Thunderstorm potential returns Sunday and lasts through Tuesday
After an early morning round of locally strong convection,
conditions have cleared out nicely across the area this afternoon.
We are now likely in a lull of thunderstorm activity until no
earlier than very late tonight, and more likely tomorrow morning.
This is because we have a front dropping through the region. It is
almost to the Lake Michigan shoreline of Wisconsin as of 2 pm this
afternoon.
This front is mainly a dew point boundary, and will not encounter
any instability before dark since a lot of it was cleared out by the
convection earlier. In addition, there is really no forcing
mechanism aloft to help the front. The front will drop to Southern
Lower Michigan by later tonight before stalling out.
The HRRR was a bit overzealous with redeveloping additional
convection overnight earlier compared to other sets of model data.
Latest versions are trending down, and coming into better agreement
with other model consensus. We believe this is the right trend as
tonight will be different than last night/this morning with no low
level jet to lift up over the front to develop convection.
We do believe that we will see storm activity pick up Sunday morning
and afternoon. We will see the upper flow back a bit to the SW as an
upper trough is carved out over the Rockies. This will help the
stalled out front lift northward across the area, with increased
moisture inflow riding over the front. In addition, a weak short
wave/MCV looks to approach the area.
MU CAPEs will increase to potentially 2,000 J/kg, with the
instability elevated north of the front. Effective shear values are
highest at the edge of the instability, and taper off further south.
Mid level lapse rates will be on the increase providing a hail
threat. Areas with a shallow stable layer could see some wind mixed
down to the sfc. A tornado can not be ruled out with good good low
level shear near the warm front confirmed by a decently curved
hodograph, and SRH`s 150-300 m2/s2 at 0-1 and 0-3km respectively.
We should see a break then Sunday night and early Monday as the warm
front lifts north of the entire area, putting us in the warm sector.
Thunderstorm chances will increase then Monday afternoon and evening
as we see the better flow with short wave activity settle into the
area, along with the theta e axis. The very warm and increasingly
humid air mass will supply the fuel. Potential short waves could
fire storms over the area. The one limitation at this time looks to
be limited deep layer effective shear only around 20 knots at the
synoptic scale. Still plenty of other parameters to compensate for
the lack of shear to produce a severe threat. steep mid level lapse
rates and DCAPEs over 1,000 J/kg will provide a hail and wind
threat.
We lose the potential a bit Monday night and Tuesday morning as we
lose the heating of the day. That will ramp back up Tuesday
afternoon with additional heating. The more favored area Tuesday
afternoon looks further SE as the front will be moving through, and
those areas have a better chance to maximize heating before the
frontal passage.
Deep layer shear becomes much better with the better mid-level
winds. That combined with potentially strong instability would
supply a decent severe threat with all hazards in play. That is
quite a bit of time out yet, with things likely to change a bit with
regards to timing.
- Mostly dry and cooler Wednesday and beyond
The front will exit the entire area Tuesday evening, bringing an end
to the severe threat. We may keep some low level moisture in early
on Wednesday, but a fairly strong area of high pressure will build
over the area.
This high will remain in control of the weather potentially into
next weekend as we get trapped between the northern and southern
streams. This will bring seasonable temperatures with mostly dry
conditions. Temperatures will gradually increase a bit later in the
week as return flow sets up, after the coolest weather with temps in
the 60s on Wednesday.
&&
.AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z SUNDAY/...
Issued at 143 PM EDT Sat May 16 2026
The rest of the day will see continue to be dominated by VFR
conditions. Winds will be somewhat gusty with gusts 20-25 knots.
A weather system will move in early tomorrow morning. Some clouds
out ahead of it will be borderline MVFR. Expect those to move in
between 09Z to 13Z. There will be a chance for some showers and
potentially some storms late morning through the afternoon. Not
too confident yet whether each site will see them, so went with
prob30 for now. Any storms could bring locally MVFR to IFR
conditions.
&&
.MARINE...
Issued at 239 PM EDT Sat May 16 2026
We look to remain headline free for the marine waters for just about
all of the daylight hours on Sunday, before needing one beginning
Sunday evening. It is at that point that we get into the warm sector
solidly, and the gusty winds that come with it. Once the winds pick
up Sunday evening, we will likely need a headline through Tuesday
when the cold front moves through. Right now it looks like this will
be a solid SCA event, with just a small chance it may increase
enough to flirt with Gales.
&&
.GRR WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
MI...None.
MARINE...None.
&&
$$
DISCUSSION...NJJ
AVIATION...Ceru
MARINE...NJJ
NWS GRR Office Area Forecast Discussion