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Enhanced Fujita Ratings Debate Thread

It's very much worth noting the church was already observed by Tim Marshall, the ASCE, HAAG, SEI, and AMS and their consensus was 170 mph, so a re-rating would require some pretty monumental "going against the grain" by NWS Paducah.

IMG_3327.jpegIMG_3325.jpegIMG_3326.jpeg
Here's the full paper
 
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Ah…well…they’re using the wrong DI in retrospect. So, maybe it doesn’t count too much?
Very true. However, it's also unlikely any of these institutions will come back and amend their 170 mph estimate, so it'll be up to the meteorologists at NWS Paducah to override it. Will they do it?

I think it's safe to say, while I'm optimistic, I still have a healthy amount of skepticism about this whole situation. Is one small, mostly irrelevant office's decision to go against precedent and rate a tornado appropriately going to lead to a reversal of a whole decade's worth of terrible judgements? Not on its own I don't think. We still have a ways to go. The new EF scale is still years away as well. Vigilance is the key.
 
It's very much worth noting the church was already observed by Tim Marshall, the ASCE, HAAG, SEI, and AMS and their consensus was 170 mph, so a re-rating would require some pretty monumental "going against the grain" by NWS Paducah.

View attachment 47201View attachment 47202View attachment 47203
Here's the full paper
Im quite certain this is saying what the *minimum* windspeed of a religious building fully collapsed is, so what was at the time the LB max DOD. They said 170, the current (not 100% up to date but the most recent the public has), is 175mph. Still pretty accurate.
 
Im quite certain this is saying what the *minimum* windspeed of a religious building fully collapsed is, so what was at the time the LB max DOD. They said 170, the current (not 100% up to date but the most recent the public has), is 175mph. Still pretty accurate.
So no EF5 still…
 
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Im quite certain this is saying what the *minimum* windspeed of a religious building fully collapsed is, so what was at the time the LB max DOD. They said 170, the current (not 100% up to date but the most recent the public has), is 175mph. Still pretty accurate.

Excellent point. This is how NWS Paducah should approach it if/when they upgrade as well. Again, seriously, well done.
 
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So no EF5 still…
The number that correlates with the *lowest* possible windspeed needed to completely destroy a CARB does not equal the windspeed needed to destroy a CARB with significantly better construction. Also with information known to us that is newer than the Marshall paper, First Presbyterian is a very solid EF5-plausible indicator.
 
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This isn't the one with the rusted bolts is it @buckeye05?
Based on the imagery from Tim Marshall, yes some bolts did seem to be rusted but I'm not sure this significantly affected the building integrity
 

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I understand why everybody is talking about Mayfield, but I think the much bigger offender getting underrated was that Bowling Green storm. Especially considering the dividing line between violent and strong on the EF scale. That is a tornado prime for re-evaluating
 
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Im quite certain this is saying what the *minimum* windspeed of a religious building fully collapsed is, so what was at the time the LB max DOD. They said 170, the current (not 100% up to date but the most recent the public has), is 175mph. Still pretty accurate.
for now what we know about the religious building is this.
1760258602707.png

there are 2 types of religious buildings , and we have only seen a bit of the DOD from one.

also note some one ask how DI3 looks (for now) like its this.

1760258583009.png
 
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after relooking at the source video i was sort of able to find more DOD for DI3 , sadly i couldnt find more DOD for any other DI.

1760259917740.png

however this is only for DOD number along with a bit of the damage description. (image slide part).

unsure what DOD9 is as the presentation scrolled to fast past it.

here is a shot of how it looks like.

1760260228803.png
again could only be seen in a few frames per second , so it was hard to see.
 
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for now what we know about the religious building is this.
View attachment 47211

there are 2 types of religious buildings , and we have only seen a bit of the DOD from one.

also note some one ask how DI3 looks (for now) like its this.

View attachment 47210
This conversation is referencing CARB, which in the image you sent is partially incomplete like u said, I'm just going off what Nick Krasz has said about the (complete) DI, DODs and correlating windspeeds
 
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I understand why everybody is talking about Mayfield, but I think the much bigger offender getting underrated was that Bowling Green storm. Especially considering he dividing line between violent and strong on the EF scale. That is a tornado prime for re-evaluating
Yeah lol the duplex that was swept away and rated EF2 was pretty rough, and that's not even to mention the completely collapsed duplex down the road that never got surveyed despite likely being EF4/170 damage (and that's only if you believe the swept duplex isn't worthy of EF4 for any reason already, it also did EF4 damage to an MBS that was actually rated as such for only an hour before being downgraded)
 
The surveyors established that it took basically a DIRECT hit from the truck. Like, they actually found where paint swapped and everything. EF4 is fine there.
Yes I acknowledge this vehicle impact. But if you look at the video the physical distance between the vehicles starting location and the house it is literally a couple of meters.

I don't know what kind of speed it takes for a vehicle to completely slab a house - but you can go online and look at even some of the most horrific crashes of vehicles into homes where they are travelling 80-100mph+ and the houses are dented and damaged sure, but not slabbed. Using basic SUVAT equations, for a car to accelerate that much in such a short distance you would need around 3.1 million Newtons of Force (and that's not even to completely compromise the structure). If that was the force of the tornadic wind speeds I'm pretty sure the home would beyond swept regardless.

More realistically the vehicle impacted the home but the home and the car would then have been swept and thrown simultaneously. Just imagining mentally the proximity of the truck to the home I genuinely don't believe it would have compromised to the point you should dismiss the rest of the surroundings. Its clear the contextuals are supportive of EF5. So why ignore the obvious. EXP to below EXP to construction combined with UB context can result in an EF5 rating, in my personal opinion.
 
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Yes I acknowledge this vehicle impact. But if you look at the video the physical distance between the vehicles starting location and the house it is literally a couple of meters.

I don't know what kind of speed it takes for a vehicle to completely slab a house - but you can go online and look at even some of the most horrific crashes of vehicles into homes where they are travelling 80-100mph+ and the houses are dented and damaged sure, but not slabbed. Using basic SUVAT equations, for a car to accelerate that much in such a short distance you would need around 3.1 million Newtons of Force (and that's not even to completely compromise the structure). If that was the force of the tornadic wind speeds I'm pretty sure the home would beyond swept regardless.

More realistically the vehicle impacted the home but the home and the car would then have been swept and thrown simultaneously. Just imagining mentally the proximity of the truck to the home I genuinely don't believe it would have compromised to the point you should dismiss the rest of the surroundings. Its clear the contextuals are supportive of EF5. So why ignore the obvious. EXP to below EXP to construction combined with UB context can result in an EF5 rating, in my personal opinion.
I stand corrected! Still not sure on an EF5 for that location - the pre-tornado structure at least LOOKED quite frail even if it may have been well anchored under the hood - but you've at least disproved the "flying object" bit on this one.

In the last 24 hours, Mayfield finally became a near-universally agreed upon EF5 contender, Bassfield gained more support in its own EF5 case, and Bowling Green has come up as well (For the record, that EF2 duplex was IIRC hit with a warehouse and all its contents apparently, though EF2 is still too low and EF4 is warranted in other parts of the track).
 
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I stand corrected! Still not sure on an EF5 for that location - the pre-tornado structure at least LOOKED quite frail even if it may have been well anchored under the hood - but you've at least disproved the "flying object" bit on this one.

In the last 24 hours, Mayfield finally became a near-universally agreed upon EF5 contender, Bassfield gained more support in its own EF5 case, and Bowling Green has come up as well (For the record, that EF2 duplex was IIRC hit with a warehouse and all its contents apparently, though EF2 is still too low and EF4 is warranted in other parts of the track).
I think Bowling Green should have kept it’s initial EF4 rating regardless due to the damage to that one warehouse at the Kentucky TransPark northeast of town.
 
...

Wow.

There you go. @buckeye05, @TH2002, we have it. A guaranteed EF5 DI from Mayfield.

I can't wait for them to reanalyze this one.
I wish it was guaranteed. You’re going to hate hearing this, but as others have mentioned, Tim Marshall actually rated that church EF4. I will say that’s always sat weird with me and I’ve always thought of that church as a possible EF5 candidate, but I also don’t have enough specific information on it to dispute the official rating. What I do know is that photos show severe corrosion of the church’s anchor plates and bolts. That will have some impact, but to what extent I’m not sure. I do think there’s a way to get Mayfield the EF5 rating it deserves, but it may come down to root ball displacements of calculations of objects being thrown, rather than structural damage. Heck, though maybe that one house in Bremen would be enough too at this stage if Jim LaDue’s recent video presentation means anything.

This isn't the one with the rusted bolts is it @buckeye05?
Yeah this is what I was talking about. As you can see it’s not just the bolts, it’s the actual anchor plates too, which actually appear brittle enough to have chipped during their failure. Rust has been responsible for multiple engineering disasters, like the Mianus River Bridge collapse, but with that said, that was still by all appearances a very sturdy building with very thick brick walls, and I don’t know the extent of impact the corrosion had.
 
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