For winds of 180kmh the report from Jonty Hall of a bow echo with rear inflow jet makes the most sense imo. For those who don't understand what a rear inflow jet is, to put it simply, when you get a bow echo from a High Precipitation storm you can sometimes get a situation where the jet stream at high altitude is forced down to ground level and that is where you get the 180kmh winds from, literally the jet stream comes into contact with the surface at the middle of the bow on the radar. You then get vortices on both sides of the both which can produce tornadoes.
As for the discussion about the type of microburst which it probably isn't, it would have been a wet microburst not a dry one seeing as it was a high precipitation storm.
Jeff.