PNSCHS) issued at 309 PM for additional observations. Heat indices are on target to peak in the 108-112 range across much of the current Heat Advisory area. A few instances of 113-115 have also ocurred, but appear to be transient and fairly localized. There are no plans to upgrade any portion of the advisory to an Excessive Heat Warning at this time, but the advisory was recently expanded to include Inland Colleton, Inland Liberty and Inland Bryan given heat indices were at or just above 108 for a good portion of those zones. Thankfully, isolated to scattered showers/tstms will begin to cool some areas off as peak heating approaches. Convection is starting to pop near and to the east of a weak surface trough that extended from near Glennville, GA to Hampton to the Santee-Cooper Lakes. East of the trough, dewpoints are quite high with readings generally in the lower-mid 70s with upper 70s/near 80 closer to the immediate coast. While upper forcing is weak, conditions are favorable for classic airmass tstms with K-indices running in the lower-mid 30s. DCAPE is elevated with values roughly 1200-1500 J/kg, so an isolated strong/severe tstm could occur with damaging winds and cloud- to-ground lightning being the primary hazards. 20-30% pops look reasonable for the rest of the afternoon into early this evening with the greatest coverage still expected to occur in the Colleton- Berkeley County corridor where the highest pooling of 850 hPa theat-e is occurring. Once convection dies off after sunset, expect a mostly dry night, although an isolated shower/tstm could occur just about anywhere at the coast where warm/moist conditions will linger. Lows tonight will range from the mid 70s inland to around 80 at the beaches and Downtown Charleston. && .SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... Broad troughing aloft will be present over the East Coast of the U.S. Wednesday and persist through the work week. Similarly, at the surface a trough will be present along the southeast coastline on Wednesday. The coastal trough will slowly dissipate towards the end of the week as high pressure builds in at the surface from the east. Temperatures at 850 hPa will remain anomalously warm through the week, with hot and humid conditions expected each day. Heat index values are forecast to reach around 103-106F inland, with a few coastal locations possibly reaching 108F. At this juncture no Heat Advisory is planned, however conditions will be borderline through the end of the week. Each afternoon isolated to scattered showers and thunderstorms are forecast, a typical summertime pattern with pulse convection. PWATs will remain slightly elevated, around 1.6- 1.7 inches with CAPE values forecast to reach around 1500 J/kg in the afternoon. Therefore, any thunderstorm could become strong to marginally severe, with damaging wind gusts as the main hazard. && .LONG TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY/... A similar summertime pattern will prevail through the weekend and into early next week as high pressure builds in aloft along with coastal troughing at the surface. Isolated to scattered afternoon showers and thunderstorms will be possible each day, with hot and humid conditions. Head index values will likely peak around 103-105F inland with some locations along the coastline reaching 108F. Head Advisories may be required. && .AVIATION /18Z TUESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... 25/18z TAF Discussion: KCHS/KJZI/KSAV: Best convective parameters look to occur near KCHS this afternoon in the vicinity of a weak surface trough. VCTS was highlighted there through 21z. Otherwise, the best tstm impacts look to remain west of KSAV and KJZI. VFR will prevail for the remainder of the 18z TAF period. Some last minute adjustments may be needed based on radar trends at issuance time. Extended Aviation Outlook: Brief flight restrictions will be possible at all terminals with afternoon showers and thunderstorms into the weekend. && .MARINE... Tonight: No concerns with southerly winds 5-10 kt and seas 2-3 ft. Wednesday through Saturday: Generally tranquil marine conditions are expected through the period. Winds will gradually back each day and veer overnight, strongest along the coastline as the afternoon sea breeze/overnight land breeze develops. Seas should average 2 to 3 ft. && .CHS WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... GA...Heat Advisory until 6 PM EDT this evening for GAZ116-138. Heat Advisory until 6 PM EDT this evening for GAZ117>119- 139>141. SC...Heat Advisory until 6 PM EDT this evening for SCZ043. Heat Advisory until 6 PM EDT this evening for SCZ044-045- 047>052. MARINE...None. && $$ $$