Kds86z
Member
Yessir. Glad it happened in Norman nwsAlways good to see a tornado of this intensity get rated quickly. Means they have high confidence on what kind of tornado this was.
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Yessir. Glad it happened in Norman nwsAlways good to see a tornado of this intensity get rated quickly. Means they have high confidence on what kind of tornado this was.
I am of firm belief Enid was a EF5 in terms of intensity but I don't think there is any real contextuals that would push it for the rating. This is just exceptional damage.
I am of firm belief Enid was a EF5 in terms of intensity but I don't think there is any real contextuals that would push it for the rating. This is just exceptional damage.
Yeah, i don't know what I meant by there isn't any contextuals that would push it. That is extreme damage and clearly indicative of one of the more higher end tornadoes seen in Oklahoma in years.That third photo of the reply stood out to me. That is some extreme damage to low-lying vegetation.
I know metal buildings are incapable of receiving an EF5 rating based on the confines of the scale, but if that image Nick Krasz posted has sheared bolts that were installed into the building with clearly obvious extreme contextuals surrounding it, do you think it’s possible this receives an EF5 rating, especially given the fact that LaDue and co. seem to be more open minded now with applying higher end ratings?Surveyors actually ended up rating the two story slider house ef4, despite noting it to be poorly built, they used the contextuals around the house to justify the rating.
This is exactly how the ef scale is supposed to be used, find the reason why at tornado should be rated violent, instead of finding a reason why it shouldn’t be violent.
Very well done by NWS Norman. I always thought they should be the one to lead by example, being as they home the SPC and are the epicenter of tornadoes and severe weather.Surveyors actually ended up rating the two story slider house ef4, despite noting it to be not well attached to its CMU foundation, they used the contextuals around the house to justify the rating.
This is exactly how the ef scale is supposed to be used, find the reason why at tornado should be rated violent, instead of finding a reason why it shouldn’t be violent.
The metal building itself? No chance.I know metal buildings are incapable of receiving an EF5 rating based on the confines of the scale, but if that image Nick Krasz posted has sheared bolts that were installed into the building with clearly obvious extreme contextuals surrounding it, do you think it’s possible this receives an EF5 rating, especially given the fact that LaDue and co. seem to be more open minded now with applying higher end ratings?
The metal building itself? No chance.
The contextuals? Not likely, even though the ground scouring is indeed upper echelon comparable to past ef5s, they can’t rate the tornado based on that.
Phil-Campbell from 2011 was a special case in which it did get rated ef5 purely by ground scouring, but the scouring was feet deep. Although I think that was a severe isolated case of trenching rather than scouring.
So yeah, no ef5 for Enid, honestly though Im completely fine with that, NWS Norman went above and beyond with this survey.
Yea, I got the “Phils” mixed up.I believe you're thinking of Philadelphia, MS. Hackleburg-Phil Campbell had multiple instances of EF5 structural damage (at least, given the way the scale was interpreted at the time).
If they can locate it, maybe they can do what they did with Enderlin. LolNote: A 15000 lb RV was never found after this tornado. The owner went on top of a hill to search for it but it was not found. MBS it was in was erased.
I was able to find it on Vexcel aerial imagery; it was ripped down to the frame and lofted into a field east of the home.If they can locate it, maybe they can do what they did with Enderlin. Lol
There's actually a DI for it, and it disagrees with you:I was able to find it on Vexcel aerial imagery; it was ripped down to the frame and lofted into a field east of the home.