On July 1st my site stopped being able to load the Bahamas radar imagery. I was downloading their imagery to my site and then displaying it for people in my own display which gave people more control over the imagery, like pausing, setting a looping speed and choosing how many images to view. It seems like the particular URL where they are loading data from isn't working at the moment. However, the radar data is still available. I just had to change the URL from the site that isn't working to the site that is. But their display is still broken. My site's server is old and I can't connect to the new secure site to download imagery so I can only display the imagery directly from their site. I have updated my display so that it works again: http://tropicalatlantic.com/radars/live/bahamas/ It might be the only place that currently has imagery from the Bahamas until they correct their site. Additionally, I also updated my NOAA short range radar display. In addition to the short range radar sites, I noticed they added new regional imagery to the "lite" folder. (or at least I never noticed it before) These regional images seem to include long range imagery. The individual radar sites have 124 nautical mile range images. The regional imagery combines 248 nautical mile range imagery it seems. You can view it here: http://tropicalatlantic.com/radars/live/usa/noaa/ A very large CONUS image loop is available here (the size of the image is large, there are only 10 frames still): http://tropicalatlantic.com/radars/live/usa/noaa/?image=CONUS-LARGE I am still working on improving that particular option. If you click it, you can show the normal size of the imagery. Click it again, and it goes back to fitting the window. But it's not quite working well yet with the other options. Sometimes the draggable controls window jumps off the screen. Still fixing that. The NOAA "lite" imagery was previously not updating in a timely manner. Sometimes after 8pm EDT each evening it would not update for a few hours. It seems to no longer be doing that. It also updates faster than it did previously. Imagery might still not be as up to date than their interactive display, so you might want to avoid it during severe weather. |