Sawmaster
Member
I saw it reported here on TW maybe two years ago. My memory ain't that good anymore to remember those details but I'm positive about the statement itself as it floored me to hear it. Maybe someone with a better memory can help us out here. I can look for it if you wish but it will be quite a task for me.When did he make that quote about never rating a home EF5 like that ever again? Not doubting you, I’ve just never heard about that. If that’s the case, I would definitely have to rethink my stance on him. That’s a highly problematic statement.
However, I do maintain that WFOs with a lack of knowledge about what true EF5 damage looks like are the main offenders here. Matador, Rochelle, Chapman, Vilonia…the list goes on and on. Those were all decisions made independently of Tim. The QRT wasn’t event called in for Rochelle. I’m not saying Tim is not behind some genuinely BS calls and logic, but what was in question was who is responsible for the rash of bad ratings being finalized, and the answer is it doesn’t come down to Tim Marshall or a single person in general. It comes down to an across the board misapplication of the EF scale by numerous people. That’s a valid take and the main reason, independent of Tim’s opinion. You can’t pin an across the board issue on one person. That’s the point I’m trying to make, rather then a defense of his competency as an accurate surveyor.
I've always noted that this problem of misratings is systemic and not limited to specific people, WX offices, or survey teams. The entire approach is wrong and efforts to make more DI's and clarify existing DI's is missing the point and only making things more complex without improving them. Lowering the windspeed threshold for EF-5 is good but misses this point too. We all can agree that there are differences between tornadoes and the structures they impact. That makes applying exact specifics of one type across all tornadoes counter-productive and error-prone. We're not weight-loading a beam to failure in testing which is replicable and provable; we're dealing with situations which are all at least slightly different so no "one-size-fits-all" approach can possibly be accurate in every case. If the Fujita scales are only about damages then we need to stop including wind speeds in the discussion, and if we're going to include windspeeds we need to change to a different means of assessment. Given our advances in tecghnology I think Dr Fujita would concur.
Personally I'm all for allowing intelligent judgements by knowledgeable people to be used in ratings as long as they explain their reasoning. This could give us a more accurate knowledge such as the infamous El Reno which hit few structures but was insanely strong with high measured windspeeds and is universally acknowledged as being underrated because of that. Or Mayfield where it would suffice to say that Bremen didn't quite meed construction quality nor Cambridge shores have the contextuals we would like to see but was clearly an EF-5 anyway. These two examples aren't alone- there are many similar instances where the rating and the truth weren't congruous. This is all because of the system in use not allowing for the individual vagaries which occur with every tornado. We can fix that so why aren't we doing it?