US_Highway15
Member
That was from November 17th 2013 right?View attachment 40143View attachment 40144View attachment 40145View attachment 40146
This is some of the most impressive damage i’ve seen from the 2013 Washington, IL tornado.
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That was from November 17th 2013 right?View attachment 40143View attachment 40144View attachment 40145View attachment 40146
This is some of the most impressive damage i’ve seen from the 2013 Washington, IL tornado.
Correct my man! One of the strongest winter time tornadoes in my personal opinion and one of the costliest tornadoes of all time.That was from November 17th 2013 right?
Another outbreak as well that occured in the early morning hours. Would love a case study on that outbreak, mostly just searching for the reason why it occured before noon, and not at the normal (3-6 PM) window that most outbreaks begin.Correct my man! One of the strongest winter time tornadoes in my personal opinion and one of the costliest tornadoes of all time.
I'd love to see high-quality photos from both Coldwater Lake twisters. They seem very underrated to me.
I'm not sure if this has been posted before, but I like this recent documentary on the Joplin tornado.
If y’all had to say what the most intense supercells of all time were, which ones would you say?
The first two that come to mind for me are the Quad State Supercell from 2021 and the Greensburg, KS supercell from 2007.
I think storms A and B from May 3, 1999.Storms A&B from May 3, 1999.
The two on April 27, 2011 that produced something like 4-5 long-track EF3+ apiece (including Tuscaloosa/Ohatchee for one and Cordova/Rainsville/Ringgold for the other) from Mississippi to North Carolina.
I think storms A and B from May 3, 1999.
Greensburg supercell.
Quad State Supercell.
The two LT April 27, 2011 Supercells
And 2013 El Reno.
Good shouts, but I'd replace 2013 El Reno with 2014 Pilger, which produced FOUR consecutive (and simultaneous!) violent tornadoes, every single one of which likely reached EF5 intensity. I'd also add 4/11/65's Storm L, which produced 6 violent tornadoes including (IIRC) 2 F5-intensity tornadoes along its 270 mile path. Also there was a cell in KY/IN/OH on 4/3/74 that produced like 5 violent tornadoes (including an F5 or 2). Maybe New Richmond (produced an F3, two consecutive F5s and another F3 along with a fifth significant tornado according to Loco's reanalysis IIRC) counts, too.I think storms A and B from May 3, 1999.
Greensburg supercell.
Quad State Supercell.
The two LT April 27, 2011 Supercells
And 2013 El Reno.
IIRC, the Tuscaloosa cell produced that, Ohatchee, then an EF3 or two in Georgia. The second cell produced the Philadelphia EF5, Cordova EF4 that probably reached EF5, Rainsville EF5, Ringgold shoulda-been EF5 and then an EF3 in Tennessee.The two on April 27, 2011 that produced something like 4-5 long-track EF3+ apiece (including Tuscaloosa/Ohatchee for one and Cordova/Rainsville/Ringgold for the other) from Mississippi to North Carolina.
Crap how could I forget Pilger! That supercell was an absolute freak show. I still can’t believe that happened. Stanton in my opinion was still the strongest of the day, but I do remember one of the Pilger tornadoes produced damage that wasn’t terribly far off.Good shouts, but I'd replace 2013 El Reno with 2014 Pilger, which produced FOUR consecutive (and simultaneous!) violent tornadoes, every single one of which likely reached EF5 intensity. I'd also add 4/11/65's Storm L, which produced 6 violent tornadoes including (IIRC) 2 F5-intensity tornadoes along its 270 mile path. Also there was a cell in KY/IN/OH on 4/3/74 that produced like 5 violent tornadoes (including an F5 or 2). Maybe New Richmond (produced an F3, two consecutive F5s and another F3 along with a fifth significant tornado according to Loco's reanalysis IIRC) counts, too.
I'd love to see some analysis of early June 1980 because the very next day after Grand Island saw significant tornadoes in, of all places, Pennsylvania and West Virginia.Good shouts, but I'd replace 2013 El Reno with 2014 Pilger, which produced FOUR consecutive (and simultaneous!) violent tornadoes, every single one of which likely reached EF5 intensity. I'd also add 4/11/65's Storm L, which produced 6 violent tornadoes including (IIRC) 2 F5-intensity tornadoes along its 270 mile path. Also there was a cell in KY/IN/OH on 4/3/74 that produced like 5 violent tornadoes (including an F5 or 2). Maybe New Richmond (produced an F3, two consecutive F5s and another F3 along with a fifth significant tornado according to Loco's reanalysis IIRC) counts, too.
EDIT: Also adding Grand Island 1980 (AAAAAAAAA), Bowdle 2010 (remember those chasers getting stuck in the mud? That was because they were fleeing like 3 separate tornadoes at once), Atlantic-Tionesta-Tidioute 1985 and Yazoo City 2010. And the Minneapolis tornadoes of 1965 if those were the same cell as well.
i've got it handy for y'allI remember seeing a paper from a site somewhere showing that he did initially grant the Xenia, OH tornado an F6 rating, but changed it to an F5. I’m not making that up. I did see it somewhere. I’ll have to try and find it.
From what I know, Fujita also considered rating the Smithfield, AL 1977 F5 an F6, as well as Lubbock.
I strongly believe this tornado should have been rated an EF5.View attachment 40143View attachment 40144View attachment 40145View attachment 40146
This is some of the most impressive damage i’ve seen from the 2013 Washington, IL tornado.
Honestly, I think it’s a case that could go either way. But I do believe that the high end EF4 rating was more appropriate for this tornado. The wind rowing, debris granulation, and tree debarking were pretty high end though, and trees in Illinois are notoriously known for being strong hardwoods.I strongly believe this tornado should have been rated an EF5.
-2014 Pilger NE EventIf y’all had to say what the most intense supercells of all time were, which ones would you say?
The first two that come to mind for me are the Quad State Supercell from 2021 and the Greensburg, KS supercell from 2007.