Aric Dunn wrote:well i disagree. i personally watched the the 1km visible for a while and couple that with the radar loops i have made, it puts the center closer to the coast, you could clearly see a small tight center! and i know the difference between upper level sirus clouds verses low level .. so dont want to hear that ..
Why am I not surprised? You seem to look for arguments wherever you can find them. Perhaps the center was down south in your earlier radar images, but I think it's clearly moved or relocated to the northwest since then. I re-animated your image with much shorter time steps and you have your circle where the center may have been a few hours ago. I saw it down there too before sunset, but it appears to be accelerating off to the northwest now as the upper low moves out to the west. I captured your last image and drew a yellow circle near where the radar indicates the LLC. It's hard to pick it out with small showers forming and dissipating giving the illusion of movement in some parts of the circulation.

If you take a look at the heavy shower on the NE side of your blue circle in the last few frames of the loop, you can clearly see it's moving NW-NNW not to the W-WNW as it would if the LLC was as you've drawn it. It's a feeder band moving toward the center off to the northwest of your location. In the end, it makes zero difference which location is the center, as there's no significant convection firing yet, and the general path would be the same.
