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looks EF5 to meTotal wipeout with extreme contextual damage too. Just very impressive.
Vilonia was so absurdly violent I'd consider a hunger strike to force an upgrade of the rating.Total wipeout with extreme contextual damage too. Just very impressive.
Wish i could say that to John Robinson, you know? Definitely no particular bias involved, A HEALTHY rating! His way of interpreting the damage was top notch too, missing houses because the magical sense of them not being well constructedlooks EF5 to me
Oh, believe me, if i was American and ran for president, my slogan would be "Vilonia was a EF5."Vilonia was so absurdly violent I'd consider a hunger strike to force an upgrade of the rating.
I exaggerate.
Somewhat.
Yeah. My policy is this - in any other tornado with a disputed rating, my language would be along the lines of "I personally think this tornado was..." or "In my books, this tornado was..."Oh, believe me, if i was American and ran for president, my slogan would be "Vilonia was a EF5."
Essentially, on a serious note, I've referred to just getting my mind used to Vilonia being a EF5, instead of going down the (justified) crashout route being reminded of how laughable the survey was.
Still utterly insane to me that not a single house/structure in that third image was surveyed and/or given a DI. There are very few tornadoes on record that essentially wipe every home in their direct path from their foundation over a relatively long distance. Vilonia is one of them.Total wipeout with extreme contextual damage too. Just very impressive.
Goes to show how truly sloppy and lackluster effort was put into it. Documentation and accuracy matters, and for a historic tornado in Arkansas/all time standards, they rate it high end EF4 and don't even survey rows of houses. It's, as I've said, truly laughable.Still utterly insane to me that not a single house/structure in that third image was surveyed and/or given a DI. There are very few tornadoes on record that essentially wipe every home in their direct path from their foundation over a relatively long distance. Vilonia is one of them.
I very much agree. Especially considering the tornado was relatively fast moving as well. Honestly, it joins the ranks with the Super Outbreak 2011 EF5s on my eyes - not that much separates the Vilonia damage from Smithville damage. 100% deserves a spot in some sort of 'most violent tornadoes' list.I don't think it's unreasonable to put Vilonia in perhaps up there with some of the most violent ever. The damage caused was nothing short of extraordinary, in practically all aspects.
looks like a strange mix of bridge creek and Smithville , major scouring along with small shrubs being completely debarked.Unrelated to Washington, but check out these photos showing just absurdly violent scouring and vegetation damage from Vilonia. This is what I mean when I say certain damage has “the look”, though this is a particularly extreme example.
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There’s more potential for EF5 than what that purple contour shows. Literally any bare slab along that street is an EF5 candidate. Problem is, that entire street was skipped during the survey, so we don’t have any construction details to go on. With that said, it’s pretty unlikely that there wasn’t a single properly bolted home at that location.
the blue outline is more of solid EF5 damage outline area.There’s more potential for EF5 than what that purple contour shows. Literally any bare slab along that street is an EF5 candidate. Problem is, that entire street was skipped during the survey, so we don’t have any construction details to go on. With that said, it’s pretty unlikely that there wasn’t a single properly bolted home at that location.


Seen his post on this tornado a while ago. Glad to see that reanalysis is going on somewhat for many smaller eventsInterestingly, an EF2 tornado from the April 15, 2011 tornado outbreak was confirmed near Forkland, Alabama yesterday.
https://mesonet.agron.iastate.edu/wx/afos/p.php?pil=PNSBMX&e=202511192018
Nick Kraz and a few others were mentioned as helping.
Interestingly, an EF2 tornado from the April 15, 2011 tornado outbreak was confirmed near Forkland, Alabama yesterday.
https://mesonet.agron.iastate.edu/wx/afos/p.php?pil=PNSBMX&e=202511192018
Nick Kraz and a few others were mentioned as helping.