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Enhanced Fujita Ratings Debate Thread

I just have to ask:

Why are tornadoes rated just off of damage? Why are they not rated off of wind speed like hurricanes? That's my entire problem with the rating going based of of trees, shrubs and structures.
Highly debatable, but generally its because traditional radar can be unreliable (Hollister 2024) and DOW isn't a consistent way to rate tornadoes.
 
Even if the constitution quality in town was poor, Grinnell just has way, way too many violent contextual indicators for low-end EF3 to be appropriate.

I’ve seen:
-major ground scouring
-significant debris granulation
-violent vehicle damage
-severe stubbing and debarking of trees

That in my opinion should be enough for an upgrade, or at least a higher wind speed estimate, but I’m not holding my breath.
Well, I'm sure I'm not the only one with a personal opinions list. Grinnell is....well, it's not an EF3 in my list.

(my all time favorite borderline cases are Van Wert 02 and Roanoke 04)
 
165 mph peak winds now! Plevna may legitimately be rated EF4.
I'm confused - the only damage I've seen from Plevna was the ground scar and some tree damage that looked high-end EF3 max? Is there any imagery of structural damage that warrants an EF4 rating? I'm not saying I disagree with an EF4 rating for Plevna because it was very obviously a violent tornado, but I'd be shocked if they actually just gave it a benefit-of-the-doubt rating in today's day and age.
 
I'm confused - the only damage I've seen from Plevna was the ground scar and some tree damage that looked high-end EF3 max? Is there any imagery of structural damage that warrants an EF4 rating? I'm not saying I disagree with an EF4 rating for Plevna because it was very obviously a violent tornado, but I'd be shocked if they actually just gave it a benefit-of-the-doubt rating in today's day and age.
Their might be some damage we haven’t seen yet!
 
Well, I'm sure I'm not the only one with a personal opinions list. Grinnell is....well, it's not an EF3 in my list.

(my all time favorite borderline cases are Van Wert 02 and Roanoke 04)
Roanoke? As in Virginia? Or somewhere else?
 
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I'm confused - the only damage I've seen from Plevna was the ground scar and some tree damage that looked high-end EF3 max? Is there any imagery of structural damage that warrants an EF4 rating? I'm not saying I disagree with an EF4 rating for Plevna because it was very obviously a violent tornado, but I'd be shocked if they actually just gave it a benefit-of-the-doubt rating in today's day and age.
The files they are uploading at DAT are too large to be posted here, but there's some pretty significant EF3 MBS damage.
 
I'm confused - the only damage I've seen from Plevna was the ground scar and some tree damage that looked high-end EF3 max? Is there any imagery of structural damage that warrants an EF4 rating? I'm not saying I disagree with an EF4 rating for Plevna because it was very obviously a violent tornado, but I'd be shocked if they actually just gave it a benefit-of-the-doubt rating in today's day and age.
I think the damage earlier on in the path may be where the most intense damage may have happened. The tornado actually seemed to have been weakening as it was approaching Plevna from what I saw on radar.
 
I just have to ask:

Why are tornadoes rated just off of damage? Why are they not rated off of wind speed like hurricanes? That's my entire problem with the rating going based of of trees, shrubs and structures.
There’s utterly no way to reliably measure wind speeds from tornadoes in a way that will make it feasible for a rating system.

Unless we find out a way to teleport every DOW to every tornado that touches down and then make those DOW follow those tornadoes throughout their entire path, it’s simply impractical.
 
That, plus back in 1950 whatever, how else were you supposed to do it? Fujita was a gift of a man
I mean, that was then. But this is now. Can't they figure out a way to translate the wind speed on land the way they do with recon in TCs? The one obvious thing is that you can't really fly a place into a tornado...
 
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I'm confused - the only damage I've seen from Plevna was the ground scar and some tree damage that looked high-end EF3 max? Is there any imagery of structural damage that warrants an EF4 rating? I'm not saying I disagree with an EF4 rating for Plevna because it was very obviously a violent tornado, but I'd be shocked if they actually just gave it a benefit-of-the-doubt rating in today's day and age.
It was a metal building system that was pulled out of the ground or something. Not a viable EF4 di.
 
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Why are tornadoes so hard to pinpoint in wind speed though. Surely there must be a way somewhere to rate better.
 
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I think the damage earlier on in the path may be where the most intense damage may have happened. The tornado actually seemed to have been weakening as it was approaching Plevna from what I saw on radar.
The tornado was actually peaking just southwest of Plevna on radar, that’s were the highest GTG was measured, the deepest CC drop was measured, and even where the debris ball was the most prominent.

But obviously what the radar shows vs reality can vary.
 
I just have to ask:

Why are tornadoes rated just off of damage? Why are they not rated off of wind speed like hurricanes? That's my entire problem with the rating going based of of trees, shrubs and structures.

Edit: lol, quick like by OH-IOan
So I've heard this sentiment shared quite often and a lot of people really seem to think that radar-measured windspeeds should be the way that we rate tornadoes, but as of right now, I completely disagree. I believe damage is actually the best way to rate a tornado until we get accurate windspeed measurements very close to the ground layer that coincide with damage supportive of the windspeed.

Many windspeed measurements in tornadoes are taken high up in the vortex with little to no ground friction playing a role. This was the case in many of the tornadoes with windspeed measurements exceeding 200 mph. I know for a fact it's the case with Minden/Harlan 2024, where it was taken 600 m AGL. But there are some, like Sulphur 2016, El Reno 2011, and Greenfield 2024 that had windspeed measurements taken less than 50 m AGL (Sulphur and El Reno especially, they were less than 20 m AGL)! but there's more to it than that. Sulphur had EF3 damage coinciding with the 200 MPH reading and Greenfield also had EF3 damage coincident with the 300 mph reading. The only two tornadoes that had their windspeeds measured >200 MPH that did in fact inflict damage that was reminiscent of an EF5 rating was Moore 1999 and El Reno 2011 - two of the most violent tornadoes we've ever seen - while every other one failed to do this.

The question is, why is the damage coincident with these extreme windspeed measurements sometimes not lining up? I don't know if researchers know the exact answer to this, but since this is the case in reality, it's not a good idea to incorporate windspeeds only. Something we can all agree on is that an EF5 needs to be doing extremely violent damage on the ground. If a tornado has >200 MPH windspeeds measured, but doesn't do anything close to what other EF5s have done in the damage layer, then it does not deserve EF5 on merit of windspeeds alone. EF5 tornadoes need to be similar in the sense that they pose the same threat to life and property as other EF5s, and if a tornado is not capable of sweeping a well-built home off its foundation and scouring the ground, nubbing and debarking trees, etc. then it does not deserve EF5 IMO.

One thing I can get behind is using extreme windspeed measurements with damage, even contextual, that supports said windspeed. If there is a tornado that has >270 MPH windspeeds measured and doesn't impact any structures, but left a trail of extreme ground scouring in an open field worse than Moore 2013, it absolutely should deserve an EF5 rating, and we should definitely use the windspeed measurements to support said rating. But all I'm saying is that we can't use windspeeds alone, tornadoes are way too complicated as of now to simply give any tornado we see with >200 mph windspeeds EF5.

EDIT: Red Rock 1991 also had >200 MPH windspeeds taken, but it wasn't rated F5. I don't know what contextual damage it did so I can't really comment on that.
 
The tornado was actually peaking just southwest of Plevna on radar, that’s were the highest GTG was measured, the deepest CC drop was measured, and even where the debris ball was the most prominent.

But obviously what the radar shows vs reality can vary.
I just went back and looked at the radar loop and you’re right. I must’ve got Grinnell and Plevna mixed up.

I will note that sometimes the radar doesn’t correlate with the damage shown at the ground. Cayce, KY was relatively early on in the Mayfield tornado’s path and the velocity signature didn’t actually look that intense, and i’d argue that’s where some of the more intense contextual damage throughout the path happened.
 
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