Yeah the statement that there wasn’t much violent contextual evidence besides the sidewalk is simply not true. Grass scouring occurred in the Deer Creek Subdivision, and homes actually had their lawns scoured. It is especially evident in some of the aerials and local news pics. After years and years of poring over these events, I can confidently say that scouring of lawn grass is one of the most reliable indicators of a very high end event. I’ve never seen it near homes that weren’t completely obliterated, except for in the scour-prone counties of western Oklahoma. In addition, there was wind-rowing of debris in this area as well, especially near the railroad tracks as the tornado exited the neighborhood. Both of these contextuals are clearly visible in that one well-known aerial photo of Deer Creek that has been posted many times.
Regarding the bolts missing washers, I am aware of that, but from what I recall, it was some of the bolts missing their washers, and I don’t recall any home missing washers on every bolt. Think about that for a minute. If a framing crew is out there building the house, does it really make sense that the person responsible for that walked around the foundation perimeter going “Oh let’s put a washer here, let’s skip this one, let’s skip this one too, let’s put another washer here…”?
It’s possible I guess, but given the inconsistency, my gut feeling is that some of these bolts lost their washers during the destruction of the house, rather than a few being absent at random to begin with.
I was genuinely open to seeing if there was legitimate reasoning behind this, but I’m not seeing this as legitimate reasoning. The claim of a lack of impressive contextuals is just simply false, and it’s debatable as to whether the missing washers was a screw up by the framing crew, or a result of the tornado itself.