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This is just simply asinine. It’s by all indications a slider house from the early 1900s. These types of homes have received F3 ratings dating all the way back to the pre-2000s “old school” F-scale era, and it’s absurd to claim that mid-range (F3/EF3) tornadoes can’t sweep away or level unanchored homes. I mean come on, Fujita himself rated leveled or swept away homes F3 sometimes (Decatur IL, Rainsville, IN, and others). Plus, I’ve seen wind tests done where industrial strength wind-makers for movie production were pointed at cheap nailed-down tract homes inside airplane hangars, and leveled them with mid-100s wind speeds, which irrefutably proves this can and DOES happen to frail/older homes. You’re literally just blowing hot air (no pun intended) because you see an empty foundation, which is straight up YouTube comments section depth of analysis, and are citing a “good ol’ days” hyper-liberal rating application style that never really existed to begin with, even when Dr. Fujita himself was alive.
The bottom line is, he rated sliders F3 on multiple occasions, and this was by all indications, a slider. That’s all there is to it, period, done, over and out, put to bed, mic drop, whatever you want to call it. Sheesh…
You're asinine!
Nah, very fair points and good arguments. All my fair points and good arguments about this are in the EF thread. I guess my issue is more with the 150 mph wind speed estimate than the EF3 rating. Gotta remember, even though Fujita might've rated this F3, the range of wind speeds for an F3 were 158-206, which seems way more reasonable.
The flabbergasm I'm experiencing is with the classification not the rating. This can't be 150 mph winds.
