I really respect TornadoTalk and their ability to find very obscure information on tornadoes, when I read their 2011 Super Outbreak summaries in every article there were damage feats I’ve never heard mentioned before even on detailed weather forums. I was a little hesitant about paying for the summaries but it was definitely worth it imo.
Their summaries also show that in a lot of these underrated tornadoes and even some of the more well known violent tornadoes when you really dig deep you can uncover some remarkable stuff that’s otherwise gone completely under the radar, or just unnoticed (mainly because of NWS surveyors overlooking it or flat out missing them completely).
Take for example as I kept doing more and more research on the Greensburg tornado the more numerous extreme damage feats I uncovered that I’ve never heard mentioned anywhere, and especially not mentioned by any surveyors on that event. Just some examples scratching the surface include a Frito-Lay semi-truck shredded down to nothing more than a warped and completely bent steel frame, postal office vehicles also being reduced to steel frames or just entirely missing, small farm implements and equipment from the countryside well south of Greensburg landing in random spots in town, and pieces of metal and wood, license plates, mile marker signs, literal kitchen utensils being embedded into trees, many so forcefully they couldn’t be extracted even with machinery. Then the bizarre, like bedsprings being tightly wrapped around a tree while simultaneously speared to the tree trunk by a 2x4, and a gym wrestling mat from the highschool being stuffed in someone’s truck cab a 1/2 mile away.
Makes me wonder how many other violent tornadoes have produced incredible instances of damage that just simply went unnoticed due to lack of documentation from surveyors or media.