I know this won’t appease the folks trying to farm reclaimed duck habitat, but Brad Edwards says Des Moines is less than a half inch above average on precip for the year. YMMV.
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If the Minden to Manila ‘nader was tagged an EF4, the swath of destruction in Greenfield is nowhere close. That said, bad is bad.The 40,000 foot debris signature would indicate the EF-3 rating will probably change.
That's not how it works though.If the Minden to Manila ‘nader was tagged an EF4, the swath of destruction in Greenfield is nowhere close. That said, bad is bad.

If there's an earthquake with lives lost, does the Richter number not matter?not sure why people even care what it was rated. lives lost, lives ruined, homes destroyed, etc. really doesn't matter what it was rated.
If there's an earthquake with lives lost, does the Richter number not matter?
I don't think anyone is downplaying the loss of property and lives. The biggest eye opener for me, as a dog lover, is seeing that impact and the number of lost pets. Aheinz is staying busy trying to help.
Having an indicator of size immediately like with a Richter scale is useful when reporting about the immediate impact. Having a scale that you may not know the impact for days after doesn’t really do much good other than talking about it over coffee.
It would be much more useful to develop an indicator based on wind speed and elevation to be able to give immediate indicators of strength and impact. Maybe this is asking too much for the radar technology that we have available? Cause what we saw with the multiple funnel clouds seemed a different beast than some of the smaller tornados that we’ve seen this season. Yet there’s not really a method to describe the size of them in the moment.
I agree, but I I could also see insurance companies that are already facing financial pressure leverage a payout system that is influenced by a damage rating: "We aren't going to cover your house to the same extent as your neighbors due to your construction methods or not being built to our updated standards....blah blah blah....because you weren't built to handle an EF2 and they were", or some such justificationBut why does it matter how fast the rating comes out?
Knowing whether it's an EF3 or EF5 isn't going to change anything that has already happened.
I have the general path. I was hoping to see drone footage of the path between Cambridge & Colo to see what proximity it had to us.I'm not sure if this is one path, two paths, or just a cell that was throwing funnels willy nilly. What I could gather from flipping the local channels is that a funnel was verified north of Waukee, it progressed to near the Grimes area and crossed Saylorville just south of the mile long bridge. From there is passed south of Huxley and hit White Oak. I'm unsure whether this is the same funnel that flipped the semi's at the I-35 rest area or not. Probably so. From there it passed Cambridge and crossed US30 just east of Nevada. At that point I had to disengage for other distractions.
I agree, but I I could also see insurance companies that are already facing financial pressure leverage a payout system that is influenced by a damage rating: "We aren't going to cover your house to the same extent as your neighbors due to your construction methods or not being built to our updated standards....blah blah blah....because you weren't built to handle an EF2 and they were", or some such justification
Not drone footage, but this was posted by someone.I have the general path. I was hoping to see drone footage of the path between Cambridge & Colo to see what proximity it had to us.
Which is why is important to remember that the EF-scale is not a wind-measurement scale.The rating is really only important for historical/statistical purposes. I am not a huge fan of the EF scale. Yes, NWS personnel are trained and can bring in other experts to help, but they are not civil/construction engineers. So depending on availability, an inexperienced survey crew might not have a very accurate rating. But mostly, the severity or strength of the tornado is tied to what it hits. And oftentimes it is nothing but open fields/dirt. Or it's a 220 mph monster but only hits poorly constructed buildings thus stays EF3 or EF4 when in reality, it may have been an EF5 had it hit the rare structure that qualifies as well-built.
I think many tornadoes are underrated in intensity because of it.
Not drone footage, but this was posted by someone.
Just heard the state insurance commissioner on the news talking about insurers leaving the state because the weather events the last couple years made it unprofitable to remain here. He also stated that some companies were giving discounts to those who's structures met certain criteria, which I was alluding could happen. They'd be protected from lawsuits if it were stated in your policy what standards need to be met and what premiums would be for different compliance to their standards would be offered. The rating of an actual tornado would be immaterial but the damage done by an event would be reflected by the building code parameters at certain premium levels thus accomplishing the same end. We all know that discounted premiums is a polite way to say you are all going to pay but we'll charge less if you are more bulletproof than the next guy.And they will get sued out of business if they tried to pull that ****.
The Elie, Manitoba tornado was never wide yet was still rated an F5.Wondering if it's because it wasn't all that wide of a tornado? I have no clue how they rate them, but watching the Weather Channel this morning they had a drone up following the very clear path through town and they said even though it had multiple vortices it wasn't more than 2 or 3 houses wide based on the path of destruction. Again, I don't know if that is a consideration in rating them or not.