wxman57 wrote:Yellow Evan wrote:Per recon this is technically closed, so with that and the slow improvement in organization, I think this barely qualifies as a tropical cyclone.
I don't think that a west wind of a few mph within a broad area of light winds over 100 miles across really qualifies as a "well-defined" low-level center. I would call it a disturbance until it has a tight center. Doesn't matter as far as impacts. The squalls could produce some straight-line winds to 40 mph, and they'll produce 6-8 inches of rain regardless of how this system is classified. We'll know in a few minutes if the NHC has seen enough to call it a depression. Certainly, no evidence of TS winds from recon. I'm seeing a couple 25-30 kt winds in the squalls well NE of the weak swirls.
The NHC tends to be more lenient with a storm so close to land. Sloppy and ugly system, but my guess is the NHC will upgrade it at 11am based on the loosely closed LLC. Reminds me of TS Colin in 2016.