I 100% agree with you. Was it an EF-5? Without a doubt. But did it produce clear-cut EF-5 damage? Well, I have yet to see any damage that sticks out to me as obvious EF-5 damage. I'm not saying it didn't happen, but I have yet to see the damage that makes me go, "Oh, that is 100% EF-5 damage." Mayfield isn't a case like Vilonia or Matador, where the ratings are obviously way too low. And when you use the ratings in the way they've been applied post-2014, EF-5 is extinct at this point; hell, even an EF-4 rating is nearly extinct. It's to the point now that I see an EF-4 rating for an obviously violent tornado and think, "Well, at least they went EF-4," even if it's 170 mph for something that is clearly stronger than a 170 mph EF-4.
Hopefully, the updated EF-scale will fix this issue of making an EF-5 rating unattainable and perhaps will give leeway to go back and allow upgrades to these borderline cases, such as Mayfield. But I feel like that's just wishful thinking on my part.
The damage in Bremen specifically to that weirdly constructed home would’ve gotten an F5 rating without question had it occurred before 1980. The contextual damage is easily ef5 as well and despite the odd construction of the home it pulverized the debris in smithville like fashion. The undebarked trees come into question but Rochelle didn’t do any debarking either despite causing plenty of EF5 worthy DIs as well.
And I’m gonna bring up Rolling Fork here, specifically this quote.
"So, what gave it the 195 mark? And, the best answer to that is what didn't give it the 200 mark...The Green Apple Florist, essentially a single family home that was modified to built to be a floral shop and it is slabbed to the ground and swept clean. Why not F5? Why not EF5? And two things really stuck out to us from the consensus on why not EF5. One was this building, even though it was extremely, extremely destroyed, I mean on its own, taken out of context,
I think most people would agree this would be representative of an EF5 tornado; the damage to that building...
If there had even been two of these side-by-side that had suffered the same fate, then maybe we could have had more confidence on that, but we didn't...But it was, to that point that we were very very close and this is probably about as close as you'll get across that threshold, without making it...A question we get a whole lot is like how can you be so sure that it was a five miles per hour from F5, but not quite there? And the answer to that is we aren't. What the EF-scale is, is a damage scale...Is it possible that it had winds that were stronger? Certainly."
— Logan Poole, National Weather Service in Jackson, Mississippi
[29]
Based of this, Rolling Fork was the closest we got to a tornado being rated Ef5, and it was denied of that rating because a nearby building next to the flower shop wasn’t destroyed to the same degree, which is utterly stupid.
NWS Jackson did a splendid job with this survey. Unfortunately, they dropped the ball massively here.
Maybe I have dementia but where does it say in the EF scale that a structure near an EF5 DI has to also be an Ef5 DI?
That’s nothing short of mental gymnastics, on the same level shown in Vilonia. If a structure shows sufficient evidence to be an EF5 DI, then you rate the tornado EF5.
Honestly this goes to show how exceedingly impossible an EF5 rating has become. This is why I don’t take the EF scale seriously anymore, and anyone who does is simply not going to have pigmentation in their hair past 40.