Scattered, severe thunderstorms brought damaging winds to the Charlotte area

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The WCNC Charlotte Weather Team wants you to say Weather Aware because of damaging severe storms.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Scattered, severe thunderstorms brought damaging winds over 60 mph to some communities across the Charlotte area Tuesday. While not everyone saw storms near them, some of these storms were quite strong. 

A severe thunderstorm is defined as any thunderstorm capable of 60 mph winds or one-inch size hail. Any thunderstorm, even those without warnings, can still produce lightning. If you see lightning or hear thunder, you should seek shelter inside until the storm has passed. 

🌩️ If you like weather, watch Brad Panovich and the WCNC Charlotte Weather Team on their Emmy Award-winning Weather IQ YouTube channel. 🎥

Severe thunderstorms are capable of bringing down powerlines and tree branches.

In Cabarrus County, trees are down near Roberta Road and Physicians Boulevard. Additional trees are down near Mary Circle.

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In Mecklenburg County, half-inch sized hail was observed along Harris Houston Road.

In Rowan County, trees fell on power lines near Recreation Drive.

The line of storms was being fueled by another hot, sunny day in the Carolinas Tuesday afternoon. The storm lines came ahead of a cold front. As the front moves through the Carolinas, the threat of storms in Charlotte will end by 8 p.m.

For the latest weather alerts, download the WCNC Charlotte mobile app and enable push notifications.

See severe weather happening near you? If you can safety take a photo or video, you can text us at 704-329-3600 or upload using the Near Me feature on the WCNC Charlotte app

See the full WCNC Charlotte weather forecast

Whenever there is a threat of severe weather that could impact your life, the WCNC Charlotte Weather Team will advise you to stay Weather Aware.

Live interactive radar:

WCNC Charlotte’s Weather IQ YouTube channel gives detailed explainers from the WCNC Charlotte meteorologists to help you learn and understand weather, climate and science. Watch previous stories where you can raise your Weather IQ in the YouTube playlist below and subscribe to get updated when new videos are uploaded.