I saw the tweet you were referencing and also say I disagree with what is being argued. He may well be technically correct in the application of the scale, but I think the realistic application is likely incorrect. The home is slabbed, and had anchor bolts - you can start with a baseline EXP/200mph. In this case, if there were deficiencies in the anchoring with a "few missing nuts and washers", and context was high end.
This, at least in my opinion, just doesn't justify a complete movement all the way to LB/165mph, as suggested. Per this logic you should basically see only 165mph, 200mph, or 220mph ratings for slabbed homes, which is neither realistic nor makes sense. A completely unanchored, terribly built home is obviously at the bottom of LB, but this home was obviously not all the way to LB, especially considering some of the nearby context. Moving above EXP windspeeds should, in an ideal application of the scale, be done incrementally to reflect how far off construction standards the structure is. While probably technically incorrect, the most accurate application of the scale to true intensity probably goes further and any slabbed home supported by clearly violent contextuals should get baseline EF4.
Besides, Rochelle was clearly an EF4+ tornado. Or at least those are my thoughts anyway. Would be interesting to hear more about this from the Nick K guy though, as he evidently has detailed knowledge about the scale.