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Enhanced Fujita Ratings Debate Thread

Here are some tornadoes that were definitely underrated. Feel free to add to the list.

Bakersfield, MO
Berryman, MO/Old Mines, MO
Lake City, AR
Grinnell, KS
Plevna, KS
Enderlin, ND*
Clear Lake, SD*

*I am uncertain if these tornadoes will be rated higher but i am not going to hold my breath.
It’s funny how even we are too conservative to pull out the sacred 5 these days. Diaz and maybe one or two others would be serious (e)f5 contenders years ago but now they don’t even have a chance. FWIW I’d throw in Selmer
 
It’s funny how even we are too conservative to pull out the sacred 5 these days. Diaz and maybe one or two others would be serious (e)f5 contenders years ago but now they don’t even have a chance. FWIW I’d throw in Selmer
The Selmer tornado was borderline but it could have been rated low-end EF4. I am not sure if I would call the Grinnell tornado an EF5 but it certainly could have been rated high-end EF4 based on the extreme context. I think there are times I can be conservative but not absurd.

Edit...The Jamestown tornado should be rated mid to EF4 based on a truck being mangled beyond recognition.
 
The Selmer tornado was borderline but it could have been rated low-end EF4. I am not sure if I would call the Grinnell tornado an EF5 but it certainly could have been rated high-end EF4 based on the extreme context. I think there are times I can be conservative but not absurd.
If we’re talking ef5 under ratings I have to throw Diaz and London in the ring. Marion I’m probably okay with (would have gotten f5) and I haven’t looked at Tylertown or Larkin enough
 
If we’re talking ef5 under ratings I have to throw Diaz and London in the ring. Marion I’m probably okay with (would have gotten f5) and I haven’t looked at Tylertown or Larkin enough
TBH I am not sure what tornadoes from this year I would call EF5. However, there seems to be some that were near or likely at EF5 intensity.
 
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Yeah I don’t think there are any slam dunk Rolling Fork/Mayfield esque events that were obvious underratings. There were some that I think definitely hit ef5 intensity but alas.
Tornadoes like Goldsby 2011, Chickasha 2011, and Vilonia 2014 i would consider slam dunk EF5 tornadoes. I would say Mayfield 2021 with a little less certainly but probably could have been rated EF5.
 
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Tornadoes like Goldsby 2011, Chickasha 2011, and Vilonia 2014 i would consider slam dunk EF5 tornadoes. I would say Mayfield 2021 with a little less certainly but probably could have been rated EF5.
Maybe I worded that a little wrongly. Mayfield probably makes it into that category of “underrated on purpose or because of pure incompetence.” Rolling Fork is “Definite f5, should be ef5.” I think Diaz and London have legitimate claims to that Rolling Fork category.
 
Maybe I worded that a little wrongly. Mayfield probably makes it into that category of “underrated on purpose or because of pure incompetence.” Rolling Fork is “Definite f5, should be ef5.” I think Diaz and London have legitimate claims to that Rolling Fork category.
Rolling Fork 2023 seems likely an EF5 as you said. Don't worry about the way you worded something because I do get what your saying.
 
I've been trying to find the time to make a detailed comment in response to people's counter arguments to my EF4 candidates, and this is the exact point I wanted to make. It's crazy EF4 damage is just rated EF3 now. It has become so common it's just accepted as the correct practice. There was no change to the scale, but it has been changed drastically in practice. Idk when it changed, but it IS a MAJOR change. A lot of the people arguing in favor of consistency are failing to see this very clear lack of it in the way ratings have shifted.
Obviously there will be some disagreement, but I'm happy to read your detailed comment when you have the time for it.

Edit: I'm especially interested if anyone wants to make an F5 or even EF5 (I make a distinction between the two) for either Marion, IL or London, KY. And of course, if anyone EVER finds anything with that Linton, IN tornado, let me know. :)

Double edit: where can I find the survey for Linton? Google isn't helping me. Triple and last edit lol: I think I found the DAT but it isn't very detailed. I remember seeing vague photos of farm equipment smattered with mud but I don't see that on the DAT.
 
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I'm going to answer these in steps to avoid clutter and attempt to make each point clear. Each paragraph is denoted by a number.

1. I'm assuming you're talking about the contextuals in my example I shared. There is no "quantifiable" way to do that, I agree. But precedent has been set with past F5 tornadoes and EF5 tornadoes, a precedent that's more than valid, that allows us to be able to discern violent contextual damage from non-violent contextual damage. Almost anyone in this forum is capable of discerning between those two things, and there are some borderline cases that are more challenging, but the point still stands. This has nothing to do with actually attempting to quantify the wind speeds here required for these exact things, doing so is not only exceptionally nontrivial, but I imagine the answers we would get would be extremely inconsistent if we did have some hypothetical way to get a windspeed calc on a hardwood tree being debarked.

What about my example isn't a valid reason to stay conservative with the rating? There's a lot of "what ifs" here. That's not how science works, we operate based on what we know and can confidently say. Hypotheses are for new ideas, not a full-fledged scale that is supposed to be entrenched in reality. That's not what is happening with the current scale, I agree, but in Enderlin's case it just doesn't apply. There's a single instance of damage from this tornado that may point to EF5 level winds. In every other rated EF5, and even a good portion of F5s, there's a lot. That's the consistency that we should have at this point. We may not know what wind speeds are adequate to inflict extreme scouring, but it definitely doesn't require a minimum of 250 mph winds, that's most certainly an over-exaggeration.

I agree with your final sentence. But, being careful as a scientist is very important. I think over-estimations are just as bad as under-estimations. The reasons for the extremely over-conservative rating of today are mostly not unscientific, and I think you should be a bit careful with throwing a term like that around when the people who are surveying the damage are full-fledged wind engineers. Again, I agree that some WFOs are problematic when it comes to this. But that's why I think the biggest issue with the scale is the consistency in how its applied, not necessarily the contents of it.

2. I didn't use it as an excuse for lowballing ratings. The very reason why a lot of these listed windspeeds for the EF scale are the way they are is because of the things I mentioned here, this is the math that gives us the 200 mph EF5s. Which, as you know, isn't correct, because we have seen countless examples of 200+ mph readings, some even near ground level, in non-violent tornadoes. I'm arguing that it's too difficult with what we have now to be able to confidently say "this tornado briefly reached EF5 intensity because it threw a train car, and somehow managed to not debark trees extensively," and we should reflect that in the consistency of how we rate tornadoes, at least for now.

I was discussing those points in the context of the train car throw. I was giving potential reasons why the calculation could be giving either A) a higher number than what should be expected, and/or B) a number that makes no sense. You and I both do not know the exact windspeed required to loft a train car and toss it. What the calculation tells us, is that a wind moving in one direction, acting uniformly over only one side of the object, with little to no vertical component, with no debris, and without lift, requires >260 mph winds. Tornadic winds are extremely complicated and this is most certainly not the case within them, so honestly this doesn't tell us a whole lot IMO. It's still an impressive calculation too, but again, it's just too complex to integrate confidently into what our final rating should be.

3. If a tornado inflicts less-than-violent scouring throughout almost its entire life, and slabs a house in the process, then there isn't anything wrong with assuming that it is a poorly built structure, you just need to find evidence of it. Which these engineers are obviously too good at doing. I'm not saying to assume poor construction with every home, I'm saying you can safely assume it or prior lack of structural integrity if the context surrounding it makes sense with that conclusion. That's not being unscientific, that's proposing an idea and uncovering new information that supports it. What I have a problem with is when homes are nitpicked to death despite being surrounded with good context, or homes that aren't looked into in-depth with good context either. This does most certainly occur, unfortunately.

4. We do know 150 mph winds can't do that. Again, this is an issue with the EF scale having the listed wind speeds it does. As @jiharris0220 stated, a 200 mph F3 rating would make perfect sense here. But also, that doesn't mean that a >200 mph EF5 works here, the EF scale winds are simply incorrect (at least at violent intensities specifically). I promise you, though, that people are working to fix the issue with the new scale.

I fully share a lot of the sentiments that you do, believe me. This whole conversation is mostly about my opinion on Enderlin and nothing else. I'm not defending past ratings, I just don't think Enderlin deserves an EF5 rating at all. Maybe a low-end EF4, but that's the highest I'm willing to go.


The scouring looked to be about on par with Grinnell's worst scouring, obviously a far smaller size but that's what I deduced. There was a twitter post about it in the Severe Weather 2025 thread, it looks extremely impressive to me. Of course, I'm happy to be proven wrong here.
I should also clarify I didn't respond to the rest of your points because, even though I don't fully agree with them, I don't strongly disagree with them either. The only thing I will say is that, in terms of forming hypothesis and testing/studying them with intense scrutiny, Ted Fujita already did. He put in tons of groundwork and published tons of material supporting his claims. He did favor quantity over quality though, and didn't follow the peer review process with a lot of his papers, so that does tarnish his legacy a bit.

He was a physicist, and used advanced physics to make his calculations. He was a level more qualified than structural engineers. As a physics student surely you see that right? I think it'd benefit this thread a lot if you read some of his papers and got a better understanding of his beliefs. You're definitely smart enough to understand the details a lot of us can't.

Also thanks for reminding me about @pohnpei 's research. I have the day off today. Maybe i'll dive into that finally.
 
Off topic, but none of the damage from Rolling Fork screams “ EF5 “ to me.
Rolling Fork is so strange to me because even though it didn't really wipe slabs clean like you'd expect from an EF5, the debris granulation it produced is some of the worst I've ever seen. It looked like the buildings were put through those wood shredders you see tree removal companies using. The tornado literally mulched the town. I think it's a really atypical damage presentation.
 
I should also clarify I didn't respond to the rest of your points because, even though I don't fully agree with them, I don't strongly disagree with them either. The only thing I will say is that, in terms of forming hypothesis and testing/studying them with intense scrutiny, Ted Fujita already did. He put in tons of groundwork and published tons of material supporting his claims. He did favor quantity over quality though, and didn't follow the peer review process with a lot of his papers, so that does tarnish his legacy a bit.

He was a physicist, and used advanced physics to make his calculations. He was a level more qualified than structural engineers. As a physics student surely you see that right? I think it'd benefit this thread a lot if you read some of his papers and got a better understanding of his beliefs. You're definitely smart enough to understand the details a lot of us can't.

Also thanks for reminding me about @pohnpei 's research. I have the day off today. Maybe i'll dive into that finally.
Thank you for clarifying this, I misinterpreted it as you missing a bit of the points I was making in your previous post. I suppose we'll just have to agree to disagree.

I can't fault Fujita for the lack of peer review processes in his papers, I wouldn't necessarily consider it a tarnish to his legacy. After all, it wasn't his fault that meteorology was far less advanced than today back in the 70s and 80s, with far less participation than today I imagine. I don't know how he was personally obviously, but he strikes me as someone who was extremely passionate about the topic almost to a fault - based on some of the things I've seen here echoed on this forum, he definitely seemed like someone who was prone to overhyping tornado intensity (F6 ratings for tornadoes that weren't overly dramatic in their F5 damage presentation, like Smithfield 1977 or Xenia 1974). I'm pretty sure he was giving violent ratings based purely on ground swirls as well, which is something I cannot agree with at all. But again, he was a product of his time, and his contributions to meteorology were nearly unparalleled. He's definitely a legend and no one can say otherwise.

Engineers are most certainly every bit as qualified as a physicist, though. They go through the ringer in uni just as roughly as physicists do, lol. Engineering is simply applied physics, while pure physicists work with hypothetical things and whatnot. There's no reason to downplay them IMO. It's just strange to me that the engineer wind calcs are so much different than the wind calcs for other things, it's super inconsistent, and it's something we need to work more on collectively as scientists.

Don't say I ever praised engineering though. It's the inferior science /s
 
Thank you for clarifying this, I misinterpreted it as you missing a bit of the points I was making in your previous post. I suppose we'll just have to agree to disagree.

I can't fault Fujita for the lack of peer review processes in his papers, I wouldn't necessarily consider it a tarnish to his legacy. After all, it wasn't his fault that meteorology was far less advanced than today back in the 70s and 80s, with far less participation than today I imagine. I don't know how he was personally obviously, but he strikes me as someone who was extremely passionate about the topic almost to a fault - based on some of the things I've seen here echoed on this forum, he definitely seemed like someone who was prone to overhyping tornado intensity (F6 ratings for tornadoes that weren't overly dramatic in their F5 damage presentation, like Smithfield 1977 or Xenia 1974). I'm pretty sure he was giving violent ratings based purely on ground swirls as well, which is something I cannot agree with at all. But again, he was a product of his time, and his contributions to meteorology were nearly unparalleled. He's definitely a legend and no one can say otherwise.

Engineers are most certainly every bit as qualified as a physicist, though. They go through the ringer in uni just as roughly as physicists do, lol. Engineering is simply applied physics, while pure physicists work with hypothetical things and whatnot. There's no reason to downplay them IMO. It's just strange to me that the engineer wind calcs are so much different than the wind calcs for other things, it's super inconsistent, and it's something we need to work more on collectively as scientists.

Don't say I ever praised engineering though. It's the inferior science /s
"I'm pretty sure he was giving violent ratings based purely on ground swirls as well, which is something I cannot agree with at all."

There was some guy here - I think he was Australian, actually? - who made a very compelling presentation on how this aspect of tornadic thought is really not nearly as crazy as it sounds. Darned if I can find his posts, though.

As an aside, though, I do know that my friend who graduated from Penn State chemical engineering said all of the other engineers constantly lambasted civil engineers as the lowest form of engineer. I'm not sure how much of that was in jest. :) He also finds many tornado ratings obviously absurd.
 
Rolling Fork is so strange to me because even though it didn't really wipe slabs clean like you'd expect from an EF5, the debris granulation it produced is some of the worst I've ever seen. It looked like the buildings were put through those wood shredders you see tree removal companies using. The tornado literally mulched the town. I think it's a really atypical damage presentation.
I’ll give Rolling Fork credit where credit is due. Some of the vehicle damage was pretty severe. The debarking was pretty widespread, and the granulation was very extreme.
 
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