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Little OT but I am absolutely convinced EF-5 type wind speeds are way more common in tornado's than assumedDOW recorded a 244-mph instantaneous wind gust on that St. Libory tornado last night.
Legit question deserves a legit answer
I only post weird stuff when I’m a little drunk. It’s a weird OCD tick, idk. I might have Tourette’s or something. Being transgressive helps me blow off steam/frustration
I’m not gay though. I am a troll sometimes. I am smart, pretty sure in the 130-140 IQ range but IQ is not that important. A necessary but not sufficient condition for success, and one whose returns diminish rapidly and approach negative around 130-135.
There ya go
no doubt was an EF-5 strength tornado, will probably get rated EF3-4 though.
Don’t apologize Michelle. We appreciate you. You can’t be here 24/7!Tourette's Syndrome doesn't make you post bull*hit on a wx forum. I should know because my son had it as a child. If it's because you're drunk, that's a you problem. This is your one and only warning - keep it clean and on topic or you CAN go make your own forum because you will no longer be allowed here. Apologies to the other members - I wasn't on here yesterday because a dear friend of mine passed.
The thing is that this was an instantaneous wind gust - due to the impracticability of measuring using this metric the EF scale operates on a 3-second measurement, like hurricanes. Instant winds can be much, much higher than actually-sustained winds over time. It could have been an EF5; I don't see anything that solidly proves it in my view though as I'm a huge believer in the fact that instant-reading radars should not be factored into an EF rating whatsoever. All of the homes it hit were built to borderline-illegal construction standards, so structurally it's a high EF2 to low EF3.no doubt was an EF-5 strength tornado, will probably get rated EF3-4 though.
Really? Where did you see that at?The thing is that this was an instantaneous wind gust - due to the impracticability of measuring using this metric the EF scale operates on a 3-second measurement, like hurricanes. Instant winds can be much, much higher than actually-sustained winds over time. It could have been an EF5; I don't see anything that solidly proves it in my view though as I'm a huge believer in the fact that instant-reading radars should not be factored into an EF rating whatsoever. All of the homes it hit were built to borderline-illegal construction standards, so structurally it's a high EF2 to low EF3.
Aerials of the homes it hit along 7th and Denton Roads north of St. Libory show that the construction standards were absolutely shoddy, to the point where I'm not even convinced whoever built them is doing it legally. The foundation of one of the homes literally looks like it is made out of termite-ridden plywood (wind somehow got into the foundation and blew parts of it outward), and the other two it hit kinda just fell over (with more plywood wall construction). Video confirms that the two homes were on the outer edge of the windfield; they should not have sustained that degree of damage with that in mind under normal circumstances.Really? Where did you see that at?
The thing is that this was an instantaneous wind gust - due to the impracticability of measuring using this metric the EF scale operates on a 3-second measurement, like hurricanes. Instant winds can be much, much higher than actually-sustained winds over time. It could have been an EF5; I don't see anything that solidly proves it in my view though as I'm a huge believer in the fact that instant-reading radars should not be factored into an EF rating whatsoever. All of the homes it hit were built to borderline-illegal construction standards, so structurally it's a high EF2 to low EF3.
"Borderline-illegal", not definitively "illegal" - there's zero way homes were built up to code, and see above as to why the construction is so bad. It's some of the worst I've ever seen looking at damage photos.Where are you getting information that the homes were “illegally” constructed?
I'm pretty sure using plywood walls without the minimum amount of structural framing is illegal in Nebraska (using plywood should be illegal regardless), but that's just my own observation and could be wrong. On the upside there does appear to be oriented strand board, so at least they aren't that incompetent.(with more plywood wall construction)
There’s a number of credible people in this field who believe this as well. In fact, I believe there have been studies written about this (couldn’t find it in a quick google search, but that’s no surprise)?Little OT but I am absolutely convinced EF-5 type wind speeds are way more common in tornado's than assumed
We appreciate you stepping in, Michelle. Sorry to hear about your friend's passing.Tourette's Syndrome doesn't make you post bull*hit on a wx forum. I should know because my son had it as a child. If it's because you're drunk, that's a you problem. This is your one and only warning - keep it clean and on topic or you CAN go make your own forum because you will no longer be allowed here. Apologies to the other members - I wasn't on here yesterday because a dear friend of mine passed.