Lake Martin EF4
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- 935
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- Oakland, Tennessee
I am 100% convinced that Holly Springs should have been rated EF5. In my personal opinion, after seeing the damage they found, I consider it to be one of the more egregious cases actually.
It was certainly borderline EF4/EF5.I am 100% convinced that Holly Springs should have been rated EF5.
I think Holly Springs is actually a good candidate for the “dreaded” EF4/190 rating.I am 100% convinced that Holly Springs should have been rated EF5. In my personal opinion, after seeing the damage they found, I consider it to be one of the more egregious cases actually.
New Wren 2011 was definitely an EF5.I am 100% convinced that Holly Springs should have been rated EF5. In my personal opinion, after seeing the damage they found, I consider it to be one of the more egregious cases actually.
I think he showed me something that clearly screamed EF5 damage.Yeah, I think I remember him telling me about that.
I can handle the "dreaded" 190 mph EF4 rating much more than the "dreaded" 165 mph EF3 rating.I think Holly Springs is actually a good candidate for the “dreaded” EF4/190 rating.
I’d like to see that. One tornado I’m not familiar with as much.I think he showed me something that clearly screamed EF5 damage.
There you go. https://www.tornadotalk.com/holly-springs-ashland-ms-ef4-tornado-december-23-2015/I’d like to see that. One tornado I’m not familiar with as much.
How??? Based on small buildings at a racetrack?? High-end EF4 sure, but beyond that…I am 100% convinced that Holly Springs should have been rated EF5. In my personal opinion, after seeing the damage they found, I consider it to be one of the more egregious cases actually.
Honestly, I'd rather just look at it this way:One issue I notice here is that several of the anchor bolts were installed too close to the edge of the sill plate. Additionally, large portions of the home—walls, floor system, etc.—remained on the foundation. With a typical DoD-9 damage indicator, we’d expect near-total destruction of the structure and the large portions, but with most of the debris still present on or near the foundation, this was an issue we saw with Newnan (and why it should not have gotten EF4).
When anchor bolts are placed too close to the edge of the sill plate, even without visible splitting, it weakens the continuous load path. There’s less surrounding wood for the bolt to grip, which reduces its ability to resist uplift and lateral forces. This weakens the connection to the foundation and increases the likelihood of failure under tornado loads. 160 mph EF3 seems to be the right call here—I also discussed this with one of the NWS meteorologists from a different office who contributed to the survey. Also, the 150 mph DI for the home is supposed to say 160 mph, they just forgot to adjust the wind speed up after the preliminary survey.
As for the Senatobia home discussed here—using cut nails as the primary connection is a major weakness. That shouldn’t be rated at 160 mph EF3. Based on DoD-9, I’d say more in the 140–145 mph range (lower-bound).
High-end EF4 would be my minimum for that tornado. You got to admit that the ground scouring, debris granulation, and the wall being broke along with being snapped off is really impressive.How??? Based on small buildings at a racetrack?? High-end EF4 sure, but beyond that…
Exactly. There are way more point’s in favor for an EF4 rating than EF3Honestly, I'd rather just look at it this way:
Arguments for an EF4 rating
-Home built on concrete slab
-Reasonable anchoring
-All walls down (DOD 9)
-Sufficient contextual support for a violent rating
Arguments against an EF4 rating
-Anchor bolts slightly too close to edge of sill plating
Was the anchoring on that house 100% perfect? No, but I'm sure the anchoring it did have is still a step up from the home being poorly anchored using cut nails, or unanchored entirely. That, combined with the contextual support for a violent rating just feels like going with Occam's razor imo.
TH2002 ninja'd me but I was going to say, there was more extreme damage besides the racetrack.How??? Based on small buildings at a racetrack?? High-end EF4 sure, but beyond that…
What harm would it have caused if these NWS offices would have rated it as a 170 mph EF4? The house looks like it was of at least decent construction. I am just curious and I have been studying tornado damage for 20+ years and this certainly doesn't look like a case of horrible anchoring. Maybe it was a little bit subpar but why not give it an EF4 rating? It doesn't appear to be a serious violation and I am baffled how survey teams getting overly conservative about it.NWS Jackson, Mississippi assisted Memphis with these damage surveys.
Pretty simple explanation, really. You pointed it out yourself in the Matador thread:What harm would it have caused if these NWS offices would have rated it as a 170 mph EF4? The house looks like it was of at least decent construction. I am just curious and I have been studying tornado damage for 20+ years and this certainly doesn't look like a case of horrible anchoring. Maybe it was a little bit subpar but why not give it an EF4 rating? It doesn't appear to be a serious violation and I am baffled how survey teams getting overy conservative about it.