HurricaneHunter914 wrote:Are you talking about 90L because it looks plenty tropical to me.
90L looks like it's attached to a cold front. It's energy source at present isn't purely from the release of latent heat of condensation.
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wxman57 wrote:You can't find the center on a system this weak using IR imagery. It could be hundredxs of miles from that red blob and you'd never be able to tell at night with just satellite.
I'll be heading in to the office shortly. Will post some GARP images of high-res visible with surface obs if/when I get a chance. I ran GARP from home a few minutes ago and can see that if there's any center, it's north of 20N just south of the western tip of Cuba. The buoy near 20N/85W shifted to a SW or W wind a few hours ago and a ship near the western tip of Cuba is reporting an east wind of 35 kts with a pressure of 1000.4 mb. Now, as a marine meteorologist for many years, I know that ships at sea should rarely be trusted to keep their barometers calibrated or to measure the wind correctly. In many cases, they forget to subtract the forward speed of the ship from the wind speed. So I don't think this disturbance is anywhere near a TS. But there are signs that it has a broad center of circulation, possibly near 20.5 or 21N and 85W.
wxman57 wrote:I'm at work now. The weak LLC looks to be west of the "blob" of convection near 20.8N/85.1W. Surface obs around that area are in the 5-10 kt range. The only significant winds are to the east in the large area of thunderstorms where winds are in the 20 kt range.
Air Force Met wrote:Looking at the first vis loop form GHCC (don't waste my time with SSD for vis loops) it appears we have a weak LLC...most likely a vort center in the channel being rotated out of a larger circulation. Hard to tell with a 15 minute loop. Most likley not going to be the dominate circulation...it appears to be drifting west...so it is probably being kicked out. Need a longer loop to tell for sure.
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