re: The Hackleburg survey was indeed weird, and on the DAT it's a freakin' mess. Some DI's were highballed, others were lowballed.
The home
@slenker mentioned that had its concrete stemwalls pulled off is on the DAT as an EF3 DI with an estimated wind speed of 200MPH, for some reason.
Some EF5 DI's say "threshold of visible damage". Others say "debris not blown from slabs". And yet, not a single swept slab home in Tanner was rated EF5, just to give a few examples.
Spots with genuine (in my opinion) EF5 damage...
Phil Campbell:
- home at intersection of Hwy 237 and Pinion Dr: Block foundation brick home. Grass on and near property scoured to bare soil. Carport slab twisted out of place.
- Phil Campbell Housing Authority on Stalcup Circle: four unit apartment building leveled and at least 50% slabbed. Well built and anchored.
- Exact location unknown, but possibly near Woodard Rd: the infamous swept home where a storm shelter on the property had its concrete roof torn off
Oak Grove: very large, anchored brick home. Foundation a mix of CMU and poured slab.
Mount Hope: CMU framed restaurant. Slab not entirely swept clean, but a portion of the slab itself was sucked up.
Tanner: multiple slab homes swept clean, some well-built and anchored per NWS Huntsville
Other areas where plausible EF5 damage occurred:
US 43 SW of Hackleburg: Many poorly constructed homes, but at least a few that seemed like stronger EF5 candidates. Details unknown due to the fact that NWS Huntsville used blanket DIs here.
Wrangler duplexes in Hackleburg: buildings on poured slabs, but level of anchoring unknown.
Cornelius Dr, Phil Campbell: entire cul-de-sac obliterated with three fatalities. Homes swept from slabs, but construction details unknown.
Woodard Rd, Phil Campbell: At least one slab home swept, but details unknown. To say the DAT is a mess here would be an understatement.
If that's the large brick home/mansion that was swept away in Oak Grove, it also had "extensive" anchoring per the survey team. It's hard to tell what the CMU blocks are used for there.
The portion around the basement was CMU, the rest was poured slab. The home had a partial basement, meaning it didn't underlie the entirety of the home. Makes sense considering how large the Oak Grove mansion was.