Massive storms

roscoedog

Member
May 27, 2009
52
5
8
70
The one that went thru Missouri last friday was only a 1/4 mile from my house and a couple of blocks from sons. He ended up with the neighbors trampoline on his truck. Tore **** up pretty good but no one was killed or seriously injured.
 

benjay

Well-Known Member
Mar 23, 2006
5,141
372
83
Anyone know what the Tuscaloosa tornado was rated on the F scale?
 

Cyclonestate78

Well-Known Member
May 23, 2008
12,115
646
113
They are now reporting the death toll at over 200 now. What a sad day. The one storm system that went through Birmingham and Tuscaloosa was said to have tracked for over 300 miles (at the last update I saw last night). Typically we don't get storms that are that powerful and that long lived I am guessing because of location. We aren't as close to the Gulf which fuels these storms. Pretty scary stuff down there.
 

Cyclonestate78

Well-Known Member
May 23, 2008
12,115
646
113
Its the EF scale :wink:

And I'm sure they haven't had enough time yet to investigate to come to a consensus.

Pretty sure when they get out to survey the damage there will be several F5 rated tornadoes. That one that hit Tuscaloosa and Birmingham was a real monster. The severe weather expert on the weather channel was going through the video of the Tuscaloosa tornado and was pointing out that it appeared to him that it had a multiple vortex setup. Probably not a good thing when you have multiple funnel clouds that come together to form one giant tornado.
 

CyBroncos

Well-Known Member
Aug 5, 2010
4,083
71
48
West Des Moines
I don't think much investigation will be needed to determine it was an EF5.

A lot of news articles and storm chaser sites have described it as a very strong EF4 but after watching the video I wouldn't be shocked if they announce it was at EF5 strength when it was rocked Tuscaloosa. A guy on the Weather Channel who was on the scene said winds had to be at least 200 mph
 

Clonefan32

Well-Known Member
Nov 19, 2008
23,461
25,875
113
A lot of news articles and storm chaser sites have described it as a very strong EF4 but after watching the video I wouldn't be shocked if they announce it was at EF5 strength when it was rocked Tuscaloosa. A guy on the Weather Channel who was on the scene said winds had to be at least 200 mph

That is just insane. Scary stuff.
 

clone52

Well-Known Member
SuperFanatic
SuperFanatic T2
Jun 27, 2006
8,317
4,448
113
A lot of news articles and storm chaser sites have described it as a very strong EF4 but after watching the video I wouldn't be shocked if they announce it was at EF5 strength when it was rocked Tuscaloosa. A guy on the Weather Channel who was on the scene said winds had to be at least 200 mph

Pictures I saw still showed plenty of walls standing and tree trunks. An EF5 would wouldn't leave walls and tree turnks would be splinters.

Might be pockets of EF5 though.
 

jbhtexas

Well-Known Member
Oct 20, 2006
14,321
4,370
113
Arlington, TX
I think I'd want a little concrete block storm shelter, but then, it's easy to say that you'd build one, but no one ever really thinks it will happen to them.

Unless it is well reinforced with steel, concrete block doesn't make a great tornado shelter. A number of places make above ground storm shelters (as well as below ground shelters). One or the other, my wife and I have decided to get one...

Very sad day for those folks. My prayers will be with them.
 

MNCYWX

Well-Known Member
Feb 7, 2010
2,300
973
113
WDM
Un-Freaking-Real...

I am speechless... I can't believe what I watched last night.
 

garn91

Well-Known Member
Jun 1, 2006
2,193
65
48
Ankeny
Un-Freaking-Real...

I am speechless... I can't believe what I watched last night.

espcially with all of the warnings and advisories that the SPC out of Oklahoma & local NWS offices had in place all day yesterday, the loss of life that we've seen is just unreal.
 

cyinne

Well-Known Member
SuperFanatic
SuperFanatic T2
Sep 4, 2009
2,087
624
113
O-town, Iowa
To put these storms in perspective- the top 25 tornado outbreaks with number of deaths all precede 1955 when reflectivity radars were mostly nonexistent and could not warn people about impending storms. The storm yesterday, as of now, stands #7 on the list. With all of the technology at our fingertips now for forecasting/warning/seeing/communicating about impending tornadoes this outbreak was filthy nasty.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:25_deadliest_US_tornadoes

I also have a question-- Why do houses in the south not have basements? Is it too costly? Water table too high? Soil to rocky? What is it?
 

ISUAgronomist

Well-Known Member
Nov 5, 2009
26,879
8,715
113
On the farm, IA
To put these storms in perspective- the top 25 tornado outbreaks with number of deaths all precede 1955 when reflectivity radars were mostly nonexistent and could not warn people about impending storms. The storm yesterday, as of now, stands #7 on the list. With all of the technology at our fingertips now for forecasting/warning/seeing/communicating about impending tornadoes this outbreak was filthy nasty.

Template:25 deadliest US tornadoes - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

I also have a question-- Why do houses in the south not have basements? Is it too costly? Water table too high? What is it?

Basements:
Soil properties (shrink-swell w/ high clay soils) and depth (very shallow) to impervious layer (ie. slab of rock).

Edit: Where my house is in College Station, Texas (prior to building adding dirt for the foundation, yard, etc.) it is ~2.5 feet to a restrictive layer.
 
Last edited: