claude-sonnet-4-6 Analysis · Jun 10, 2026
June 10 brings hot, humid conditions with a Heat Advisory in effect and a growing chance of afternoon and evening thunderstorms peaking around 5–8 PM. While road conditions are not severely hazardous, thunderstorms and reduced visibility during storm cells elevate driving risk in the late afternoon and evening hours.
- 01 Heat Advisory in effect from 11 AM to 8 PM EDT with heat index values up to 102°F, which can cause driver fatigue, overheating vehicles, and tire blowout risk.
- 02 Thunderstorm chances rise significantly from 3 PM onward, peaking at ~49% probability between 5–6 PM, which can bring sudden heavy rain, reduced visibility, and slick roads.
- 03 Chance of showers and thunderstorms continues into the evening (40–46% from 6–9 PM), making early evening driving risky as well.
- 04 High relative humidity (63–97% throughout the day) combined with heat increases driver discomfort and fatigue.
- 05 Precipitation probability drops back to slight chance (13–22%) after 10 PM, making late night driving considerably safer.
- 06 Wind speeds are mild at 5–9 mph throughout the day, posing no significant wind hazard.
- 07 No ice, fog, or winter weather concerns. Visibility data not explicitly provided, but thunderstorms can bring brief periods of very low visibility.
Morning window: Drive between 7:00 AM and 10:00 AM when precipitation chances are lowest (14–17%), skies are partly sunny, and temperatures are still manageable (65–74°F) before the Heat Advisory kicks in at 11 AM. Evening window: If evening travel is necessary, wait until after 10:00 PM when thunderstorm chances drop to slight (13–22%) and storm activity is winding down, though humidity will be very high (93–97%). Avoid driving between 3:00 PM and 9:00 PM when thunderstorm risk is at its highest.