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Let’s not get too emotional here, we’re all just debating a scale used to rate tornadoes. No need to hurl insults around or type unprofessionally. Let’s all take a chill pill.
Also, if Elie would have received an EF5 rating today, I would be absolutely mindblown. (Without the video evidence of the home launching occurring, that is. That was the reason it received an F5 rating). The contextuals around the home are nowhere near as impressive as a lot of other HE EF4’s from nowadays and even in the past.
And yes, we see that “trench scouring” with a handful other tornadoes in the past, and it doesn’t always correlate the storm with an extreme intensity. However, Philadelphia was most definitely very, very violent at the point where it was inflicting that damage, and it is completely valid. Debris was most certainly not causing that trenching, a very large tree in the path was entirely uprooted, debarked and tossed over 40 yards in a single piece, and Smithville caused similar (arguably less intense) trenching w/o debris before it pulverized the town, which sets a completely valid precedent when rating the Philadelphia storm.
Rainsville is a more relevant one to discuss when talking strictly about what areas should be used to upgrade to EF5 based on contextuals mostly due to the area of EF4 damage northeast of the Robinson family home that was clearly and obviously EF5 level damage despite the homes not being that well built, I can agree with that.
Edit: Dome home was given 190 EF4.
Also, if Elie would have received an EF5 rating today, I would be absolutely mindblown. (Without the video evidence of the home launching occurring, that is. That was the reason it received an F5 rating). The contextuals around the home are nowhere near as impressive as a lot of other HE EF4’s from nowadays and even in the past.
I was referring to the study that was published attempting to downgrade Joplin to EF4 intensity, even though it clearly was not due to damage indicators that were most definitely pointing to EF5. NWS Springfield justified Joplin remaining EF5 intensity due to the debris granulation, manhole covers missing, parking stops being hurled, the hospital, and also pavement scouring, iirc.i cant remember what it was rated off the top of my head, but it would be on the DAT
while oil rigs getting hit again is probably pretty likely, the chance of tornados strong enough to cause significant damage to the oil rig itself is unlikely. due to the construction of the rigs, its kinda hard to assign different degrees of damage to it, its either destroyed or not destroyed. also like i said, its just not worth the resources.
i agree with most of ur third paragraph, and i agree contextuals should be used more. it feels like they are only used to prevent higher ratings. that being said, i dont think joplin and rainsville are the best examples of ur point. iirc joplin had 22 EF5 DIs, while i know confidently some of them were underserved ratings, i find it hard to believe there wasnt at least one EF5 DI that would stand up today. also philadelphia was a terrible use of contextuals being used to upgrade tornados imo, trenching is just about the most inconsistent contextual, especially with the circumstances of that day, the tree damage was mostly unimpressive compared to most other violent tornados from that day, and vehicle damage doesnt suggest EF5 intensity. i agree it likely reached EF5 intensity for a brief period as it did some real scouring at points in its path, but there is many many many more tornados from that day that were either stronger or deserved an EF5 rating more.
i think a better example of contextuals being used to upgrade a tornado is rainsville, and i think the logic used in rainsville should be applied to most tornados, although maybe a little stricter. rainsville had some impressive structural damage, impressive enough for a high end ef4 rating, and at certain points, it was contextually EF5. the problem in rainsville is that the areas with the most impressive structural damage didnt exactly have clear EF5 contextuals, and the areas with EF5 contextuals didn't have impressive structural damage. the logic they used, examining damage, especially contextuals, in the context of the tornados entire track, makes a lot more sense to me. if a tornado has high end ef4 damage in places that are clearly not its peak intensity, and has clear EF5 contextuals in other locations, i think that should be enough to verify EF5 intensity
And yes, we see that “trench scouring” with a handful other tornadoes in the past, and it doesn’t always correlate the storm with an extreme intensity. However, Philadelphia was most definitely very, very violent at the point where it was inflicting that damage, and it is completely valid. Debris was most certainly not causing that trenching, a very large tree in the path was entirely uprooted, debarked and tossed over 40 yards in a single piece, and Smithville caused similar (arguably less intense) trenching w/o debris before it pulverized the town, which sets a completely valid precedent when rating the Philadelphia storm.
Rainsville is a more relevant one to discuss when talking strictly about what areas should be used to upgrade to EF5 based on contextuals mostly due to the area of EF4 damage northeast of the Robinson family home that was clearly and obviously EF5 level damage despite the homes not being that well built, I can agree with that.
Edit: Dome home was given 190 EF4.
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