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andyhb

Meteorologist
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Everything posted by andyhb

  1. Then why are there so many holes in the DAT from it?
  2. You're saying the same thing over and over again. How about I post this thread where I specifically ask questions of those with greater knowledge than myself of the process?
  3. I'm allowed to point out inconsistencies based on previous cases amongst many other things. For example, Rick Smith tweeted at one point that one structure could be the basis for the rating of a tornado, but in the Vilonia survey, it was specifically argued as a reason to not upgrade it to EF5 despite a house that clearly was built to code and even had anchor bolts to its interior walls.
  4. Sure, I'd ask him why this entire group of structures from the EF3 Canton TX tornado in 2017 was missed in the survey.
  5. Yes I would ask him about why their Moore survey was so thorough and why the Vilonia and Mayfield ones weren't. You name dropping people isn't really supporting your arguments.
  6. That wouldn't be rated EF0 because the tree damage would probably warrant EF3 at minimum.
  7. Then you really haven't been paying much attention.
  8. More like I don't just blindly believe what people tell me without doing my own research first. Tim Marshall only visited a couple of locations (Mayfield and Dawson Springs) along the path in the first place.
  9. Of course the scale has not changed, but how it's applied does over time and depending on location.
  10. Because a tornado's max winds are rated based on the max 3 second gust, and unless this tornado was moving >100 mph (which it wasn't), its size would expose at least certain structures to high winds (including the UK Grain Center) for a longer period than that. Edit: maybe to say that point was nonsense was too harsh, because I do understand the angle (contrasting with something like the Jarrell tornado), but I think given that there have been a number of other fast-moving EF5 tornadoes and this one did produce a lot of higher end damage, it seems there was enough exposure for total destruction in many instances.
  11. That first point is nonsense. And I also don't see how the second conclusion can be drawn with large holes with no survey results along the path, blanket ratings of several spots that seem to discount the highest end damage in certain locations, and various instances of poor photography of the actual damage sites.
  12. Well regardless of the validity of his statement, I'd like to know why there are so many missing DIs from tornadoes like Mayfield and Vilonia then, especially when others like Moore 2013, Bassfield, and the like are handled much differently. I'd also like to know why there is so much inconsistency for how both conventional and non-conventional DIs are applied.
  13. Not overly. May was much busier in the Plains though.
  14. Strong tornado in progress SE of Calera AL rn.
  15. I know, I just posted that for the receipts Also they apparently rated this EF2? Huh?
  16. Bowling Green KY tornado has been upgraded to EF4 per NWS CRH.
  17. Well, there it is. Also if we're expected Jarrell-level damage, I doubt EF5 is really achievable.
  18. You know, for someone who is calling everyone else assholes, you're sure doing a lot of mud flinging yourself.
  19. Up to 15 fatalities now in the Bowling Green area.
  20. They're probably better than in rural MS or AL, to be fair. Mayfield, Cambridge Springs, and the region of Princeton that was struck are reasonably well-off areas.
  21. Some more higher end damage in this area of Warren County (near Bowling Green).
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