Good god. That is absolutely unbelievable...I also would like to find out how far did the 18 ton tractor trailer flew? If it is indeed from the Research Center near Princeton, that's more than 1320 yards.....
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Good god. That is absolutely unbelievable...I also would like to find out how far did the 18 ton tractor trailer flew? If it is indeed from the Research Center near Princeton, that's more than 1320 yards.....
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At the very least. That slab in the upper right portion of that picture is potentially the most impressive house damage I've seen so far from this outbreak. If that is a poured slab with bolts, then we are looking at AT LEAST EF4.Am I the only one thinking that the Bowling Green tornado should get at least a low-end EF-4 rating?
Thinking Bowling Green should have gotten an EF4 rating for this home alone:At the very least. That slab in the upper right portion of that picture is potentially the most impressive house damage I've seen so far from this outbreak. If that is a poured slab with bolts, then we are looking at AT LEAST EF4.
Judging by the colors (looks like plywood) I'm guessing this is a subfloor. Not 100% positive though. Could be a concrete slab with wood flooring too.This photo of a home andyhb posted, if it was well constructed and not just detached from its subflooring, is probably the best EF5 candidate I have seen so far.
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That is about as much as I need to see to conclude we have a certain "context-based" EF5.The monster dug huge deep trenches in rural area near Cacey KY before it entered Mayfield, similar to what we've seen in Smithville EF5.
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The violent ground scouring sudden popped out when it crossed the TN/KY border, this is two miles north from the State border
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We have Philadelphia/Smithville type scouring now. This is huge. PLEASE somebody send this to NWS Paducah so they can analyze the scouring trenches on foot. This could be the clincher for a context-based EF5 rating, as there is precedent even though scouring isn't an estiablished DI.The monster dug huge deep trenches in rural area near Cacey KY before it entered Mayfield, similar to what we've seen in Smithville EF5.
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The violent ground scouring sudden popped out when it crossed the TN/KY border, this is two miles north from the State border
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Yeah I was thinking the same thing. I guess in a way I really "hope" it isn't subflooring, because up to this point I've seen few homes that would actually genuinely qualify for an EF5 rating (especially by today's ridiculously and extremely stringent standards).Judging by the colors (looks like plywood) I'm guessing this is a subfloor. Not 100% positive though. Could be a concrete slab with wood flooring too.