and now for the 2 new negatives
1:they are forcing all the wind speed to be 0 or 5 (as in 65 mph , 70 mph, 75 mph) this will cause a lot of 1 mph from its next EF(Number).
(interestingly they stated they did this so it would stop having 1 mph off from the next rating.... what they did makes it worse...)
2chance of no more EF5 in non hurricane prone areas.

(note no official f5/ef5 have ever happened here meaning more anti EF5 rating)
however its to note unsure if they mean they just cant rate it as a 240 mph tornado (example 230 mph instead) or that if it or it means it gets shoved with just 200 mph
while what counts as a framehouse hurricane prone region map isnt shown the Mobile home hurricane prone region is shown
and how to fix both of this is kind of simple

just do this, you instantly get rid of both problems with this one small fix.
its to note that EF5 are still the only rating that has no common typical expected rating, as the highest one (at least that i can see) is 200 mph, therefor i suggest changing EF5 to 200 mph OR completely removing EF5 ratings as keeping a EF rating in a hard to get jail as unrealistic.
they need to make it possible to have a EF5 rating that is from one of these DI and must be in the typical strength range
DI 2 - Wood-Framed Residences (WFR): (200 MPH Typical Resistance)
DI 3 - Concrete Block Residences (CBS): (?)
DI 7 - Passenger Vehicles (PV): (165 MPH Typical Resistance)
DI 9 B - Farm Silos (FSGB): (200 MPH Typical Resistance)
DI 21 A - Metal Building Systems (MBS): (?)
DI 21 B - Metal Building Systems-Hurricane Zone (MBS): (?)
DI 27 - Single Tree (TREE): (155 MPH Typical Resistance)
DI 28 - Multi-Tree (MT): (170 MPH Typical Resistance)
as you can see 3 are still not shown to the public, and all the ones shown don't go to 200 mph with their Typical Resistance
the Di i picked were pick for this reason...
there are 3 options for nws
1:lower the bar and at least have one common typical DOD be possible for EF5
2:keep it above the bar and make the data trash for looking into studies about tornado patterns, and also cause a lot of online drama (bad and what nws seems to want)
3:Remove EF5 to get rid of all this mess if they are so scared of rating a tornado EF5 (better then option 2)
it is to note for NWS that 95+ % of past tornadoes that got rated F5 would not be rated EF5 today, its stressful to see people say that all the worst tornadoes are going away while they are still here, we just made the bar too high to rate them, this is making a artificial EF5 drought, and its best that all past and present F5/EF5 to be around the same starting destructive level.