I'm crossposting this from the June 15-23 Severe thread to avoid an EF debate in the wrong spot.
I'm not sure using Tuscaloosa as precedent is the best call. That is a top 5 underrated EF5 candidate and it threw a million pound railroad tressle 100 feet uphill in the same area. If anything it sets the precedent that only the most insanely powerful tornadoes can achieve that feat. Using really terribly established precedent to rate current tornadoes is kind of the whole reason we've ended up where we are currently.
Also I think the Mayfield tornado only threw (or rolled) the car about 25 feet
I'm not entirely sure what the Mayfield tornado did exactly, just that I heard it echoed that it inflicted some pretty impressive damage to a rail car or something. I automatically assumed that to be lofting (not super extreme or anything either, but still lofting) so I stand corrected on that.
In my opinion, the time between 2007-2013 was when the EF scale was applied most correctly compared to any other time period, outside of some bad under-ratings in 2011 (Goldsby, Chickasha, some other 4/27 tornadoes, etc). I also do agree that Tuscaloosa
probably deserved an EF5 rating, based on context and Chastain manor apartments, etc.
But, if anything, not rating Enderlin a higher EF classification despite there being the incredibly prevalent instance of tossing an entire train car would be being
more consistent with ratings rather than less consistent. Since Tuscaloosa's train car throwing feat was not rated, then Enderlin's shouldn't be rated either to stay consistent with how the EF scale should be applied, because that's how it worked in 2011. In fact, I don't think there's ever been a tornado rated based on throwing a train car (Please fact check me on this) That is my argument and if I claimed or implied otherwise in previous posts, then I misspoke. We are only going to rate such a feat if we switch to a new rating scale tomorrow, or if we add even more inconsistency to an already maddeningly inconsistent scale.
Yes, we should be striving to rate things more accurately. Yes, Enderlin was definitely a violent tornado. And in some previous posts I have made, I have highlighted the fact that I disagree with context not being incorporated more, like how it was before 2014. But this specific instance of damage has
never been rated before, and it isn't something extremely slam dunk like El Reno 2011's oil rig obliteration. I can definitely see a tornado being weaker than EF5 and inflicting this damage. For the sake of consistency, this should not be rated EF5 based on this damage. If they do rate it, rate it an EF4 with no assigned windspeed, that would also be okay with me. Or 190. I don't know. But definitely not EF5.
It's similar to how I view the questions "Was this tornado an EF5?" versus "Does this tornado deserve an EF5 rating?" They're completely different questions. Enderlin could have very well been an EF5 tornado, but it absolutely doesn't deserve the rating.