This is TERRIFYING "Close Look At Tornadoes"
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- Опубліковано 10 чер 2024
- G'day guys today we are reacting to Tornadoes.
Timecodes-
0:00 Intro
0:44 Video Review
11:19 Final Thoughts
13:17 Outro
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A tornado in OKLAHOMA was recorded at 2.6 miles (4.2km) wide in 2013
There was another EF5 that took almost an identical path as the one your talking about, but it happened a few years earlier.
@@sheataylor1510 1999
The number one thing to know is that if a tornado appears still and not moving it is probably coming straight for you
Yep. El Reno, first professional storm chaser losses during a chase…Poor TwistX team…..We miss you guys!
@@joshuacook4116 exactly. I loved watching Storm Chasers. The ironic thing was that out of all the storm chasers, Tim Savaras was always the most cautious. RIP Twistex crew Tim Savaras, his son Paul Savaras, and Carl Young as well as the other chasers who lost their lives to El Reno. I don’t think anyone is safe chasing multi-vortex tornadoes. So very unpredictable.
'EF' stands for the Enhanced Fujita scale. It's a measure of a tornado's strength, with an EF0 being the least damaging and an EF5 being close to total destruction. The scale was named after the late Ted Fujita, a severe weather researcher at the University of Chicago.
I'm a subscriber and a Home Fry so watch a lot of your reactions, mostly Home Free. But when I saw this one I thought I would watch your reaction to our tornadoes. I grew up in Kentucky and have seen a few tornadoes, at least the aftermath. in April of 1973 my wife was pregnant with our first born and due anytime. Mom, Dad, my wife and I went to stay at my brothers house in Lexington because he had a basement. Two neighbors came over that night as well. We followed the news over the radio and when the power went out we listened on a little transistor radio. We were tracing a tornado and it was headed straight for Lexington. As it happened, it split into two tornadoes and passed on either side of Lexington joining up again on the other side. Officially 13 different tornadoes touched down in Kentucky that night. You can imagine the destruction that caused. Whole communities were gone. It was certainly a night we all remember. My brother who was on the Fire department was terrified he was going to have to deliver our baby. Every time my wife would grunt or groan he would panic. That is funny now but not that night. That is my tornado story.
I grew up in Michigan with lots of tornadoes. Favorite story: birthday party for my 5 yr old niece and nephew. Big storm, farm country, clear view of everything around us. Adults stationed at windows, trying to act nonchalant, watching. House well-built, good basement: a few parents came and got their kids, others figured it was safer than their own. Kids kept playing games. At one point we could see 6 tornadoes. None of the started towards us, so we just watched. Storm cleared, nothing really close. Years later I talked to the kids about it. We were so sure they didn't know, but of course, they did. They were just waiting to be sent to the basement. That's the reality. Mostly, we see them, but they go by, fall apart, or lift up and go over. So you watch and wait, and ride the adrenaline. For us it's the color of the sky that usually tips us off... gets yellowy-greeny before it goes dark. When we see that yellow-green, we pay attention and plan where to go.
Just so you know not everyone stands and watches the tornado. We live in Tulsa Oklahoma part of tornado Alley and are fortunate to have a storm shelter. When our phones go off giving a tornado warning, we go to our shelter first! We can be in our shelter from anywhere in the house and have the shelter door shut in less than 60 seconds. And then we stream the weather on our local stations to find out where the tornado actually is.
This. In Alabama znd we are the same.
Just to keep you up at night, look at the 2 mile wide EF5 that hit Moore Oklahoma a couple of years ago. I've lived in Tornado Alley for almost 60 years and the anxiety is very real this time of year!
we have a tornado outbreak going on in Texas RIGHT NOW.
Please stay as safe as you can. Get to a secure spot if able.
We had a massive tornado here in Kansas yesterday in Westmorland, Kansas USA . also in Oklahoma and Nebraska. Its been crazy this year ! They are scary and crazy !!
We have been watching some of the videos and lives from one of the storm chasers
The sound like a buzzsaw is from air being pushed out of the house thru small openings around windows and doors and other openings. It can make a high whistling sound that is very scary.
A relative of mine was caught in that Little Rock AR tornado. Her home, and many others were destroyed. The roof was lifted off, and the house mangled. She managed to survive because her house was built into the side of a hill. She ran into the laundry room downstairs. She said she had to hold the door shut- that the wind was trying to open the door. Thankfully she was unharmed. So scary.
Some are called storm chasers. They go out and chase storms for a living and film it.
I follow one of them
A lot of them are trained first responders as well and stop chasing to help with rescue efforts
EF just stands for enhanced Fujita. Fujita is a scientist who worked on the dammage of the nukes dropped in Japan and applied his research there to come up with a dammage scale for tornados, which was the Fujita dammage scale, but it had some problems that where addressed by the enhanced version, but there are still improvements to be made, but it does its job in helping further our understanding of how tornados work and how to build better to protect against them, the biggest problem is contractors cutting corners to save money when they should have built with the proper materials, this is why you get a good home inspector before buying or during the building process.
I had an aunt, an uncle, and several cousins living in this area at the time the tornados hit Washington, IL. We were so relieved that they were not hurt, nor did they have any damage except a few trees down.
I was born and raised in southwest Kansas, USA. I will NEVER live in a house or apartment complex without a basement! I HATE tornadoes. 😱 But I do admit that we tend to go out & look at them before heading downstairs. 🙄
A piece of advise I've heard on a number of videos: If it looks like the tornado is standing still, it's not. It's coming toward you. Some people find that out the hard way. I think the reason some people stand too long filming is that they just can't believe it's real. I've already told my friends and family, if my house is ever destroyed by a tornado there's a good chance I was on the porch, watching. I'm an extreme weather junkie so I wouldn't bet against it! Some of these videos are incredibly stressful to watch!
I'll add my voice to checking out Swegel Studios. He has one called Tornado Sirens are Scary. And yes, they sure are if you happen to live where they go off for several months every year! But they're a major benefit to communities these days, thanks to the meteorologists and storm chasers who've collected tons of data to aid in predicting where they're likely to develop. Thank you for sharing the compilation.
I've lived through many tornadoes, but Hurrican Hugo in 1989 was horrible. I live 3 hrs from the coast in America, and we still had a category 5 hurricane.
That noise is the house being destroyed around them…..
Wikipedia
The Enhanced Fujita scale (abbreviated as EF-Scale) rates tornado intensity based on the severity of the damage they cause.
The one thing I am really terrified of is tornadoes. Have seen quite a few and been in quite a few. Watching from Virginia. Thank you for sharing.
That noise that sounds like a drill is the wood being ripped up from its foundation. Wood beams being torn off. The house is literally being torn apart.
Tornadoes are rated on a scale based on wind speed/destructiveness. A University of Chicago professor who survived the bombing of Hiroshima Dr. Fujita developed the scale of 0 through 5, the F scale. Later researchers have tweaked the scale so now it is the enhanced Fujita scale. The are lots of videos of EF3, EF4, and EF5s, however the most common are EF0 and EF1.
EF means Enhanced Fujita, based on Ted Fujita's scale. Theoretically, there is no upper limit to how high the F scale could go (Fujita himself I think designated two tornadoes as F6), but the current EF scale stops at 5, since it's based more on potential destruction (which includes location and path) than just wind speed. It's kinda weird, because they stopped really rating tornadoes as EF5's in the past ten years or so, even though many have technically qualified. It's been a bad season so far. I live in West Virginia, where tornadoes almost CAN'T physically touch down, and we still had an EF2 tear through here a month ago. First time in my life I've experienced one. They're still cleaning up the damage, and it wasn't even that big.
I still chase on occasion. no longer try to get as close as the Science/researcher chasers but I use to in my 20's.
some time the pressure difference may prevent you from opening the door
Grew up in Kansas and now live in Oklahoma. Very accustomed to tornado season and watching the weather.
EF = Enhanced Fujita scale. Ted Fujita worked out a standard way to assess tornado strength by measuring specific types of damage. First there was the Fujita scale, so you could have, say, an F3. The newer scale is the EF one. But many feel that this way of measuring tornado strength needs improvement. If an extremely powerful tornado with high-speed winds only goes through open fields it will get a low EF number. Nowadays, many tornadoes have their wind speeds measured directly by mobile Doppler radar. Also, it’s been proposed to add a higher level for truly catastrophic storms.
I grew up in Nebraska and now live in Oklahoma, so have experienced tornadoes my whole life. My first memory, from when I was 3 was of an F4 tornado in Omaha, Nebraska. 1975
In the deep south, we are too close the coastline. So, the ground type doesn't allow us to build underground without structural or flooding issues. We would've pay several thousand dollars to prep the area for such an underground shelter.
i live not too far from the little rock tornado that happened last year, had friends that got hit there, went to help with the clean up...
We've had 50 this year to date in my home state of Ohio. This past week on May 7th and 8th we had 19 tornadoes touch down and five of those were in the small county where I live.
People are mesmerized by the sight is why they just stand there. To a lesser degree, you want to make sure it is coming your way before you take drastic measures. They have plenty of time. That noise is the sound of air rushing in as the roof is lifted slightly.
Tornadoes are terrifying. I’ve been through a few in CT and one in SC. Luckily they all passed by us. Tornadoes are very strange. Your house can be destroyed and the house next door have no damage at all.
😢this was great. We are watching people in Oklahoma that are going through it it at the moment.
You should watch videos about here in Alabama on April 27th 2011, what we have started calling T-Day...
There were estimated to be 62 tornadoes and 250 killed in Alabama alone, and due to the widespread devastation a few of the Tornadoes were mis-classified because it was so hectic that a lot of facts were just missed. We now know that there was a total of 5 EF5 tornadoes in Alabama alone. I remember it well... It was just like apocalyptic!
See my link below
Check out Moore Oklahoma 2013 ElReno 2013 and Joplin 2011. Those 3 are monsters
I like the old scale:
Force 5 = God dragged his finger across the land
I myself live in Tornado Alley. I live in Iowa, and we've had several tornadoes recently, including one that wiped out the town of Greenfield and took multiple lives. I had a tornado pass less than a mile north of me on May 24th this year.
EF STANDS FOR ENHANCED FUJITA SCALE
The Enhanced Fujita (EF) Scale is a combination of the wind speed and the amount of damage a tornado has done. For a look at what an EF-5 can do, look for the "Greensburg Tornado" (Greensburg, KS) or the "Joplin Tornado" (Joplin, MO). I know people in both places whose lives were completely upended by what happened. The eeriest thing about the aftermath of Greensburg was the trees. They were stripped of all leaves and small branches, leaving only large branches.
The EF-3 from Andover, KS, had a lot of small trees, with very few large trees. That is due to an EF-5 that went through the area in 1991. There were multiple supercells that developed across southern Kansas over the course of an afternoon & evening that led to the nearly complete destruction of multiple communities. Andover lost all of their public buildings along with many homes and several trailer parks.
The national center for the study of tornados is headquartered in the Oklahoma City area, since until the last few years Oklahoma was the epicenter for tornadic activity in North America.
Ugg--- They can be devastating.
Tornadoes can level any home. There is no building that can survive a direct hit from a powerful one. I reside in Florida and we get tornadoes and hurricanes almost every year. I have been through 2 hurricanes since moving here, and 3 tornado warnings every year I have lived here as well.
There are no basements in my area and in most of Florida. The rule during a tornado is to get into a windowless room. During a hurricane it is to stay away basements and get into a windowless room. Basements are great for tornadoes and deadly for hurricanes. The last hurricane near me produced several tornadoes as well. Hurricane season starts June 1, and goes until November 30 in the US. With thunderstorms on daily basis during June, July and August, tornadoes are very possible.
We've had about 100 in the past week just in Oklahoma.
EF= Enhanced Fujita Scale.
EF4 and EF5 tornadoes can pick up heavy dump trucks and just hurl them hundreds of feet. They can even rip concrete drainage ditch culvert pipes right out of the ground.
do a search for wind driven objects in tornados. they can drive single straws in trees.
we doing patrol and we are safe
Always opt for your own safety! Ensure your home has all the safety straps, anchors, blocking, sealants and built with follow up lags, screws and glue. MOST contractors will not overkill a project due to cost and labor. Following through above and beyond local requirements can save your butt.
That tornado in Little Rock was so bad. They are still rebuilding. The storm went right over my town and hit only 40 or so miles away.
Also am I remembering wrong or didn't you talk about a tornado at the airport near you a couple years ago?
Yeah, a small one moved some planes around. First one I've ever heard of here. Not heard of anymore
It doesn't matter what your house is built of, the tornado will destroy it.
I always get very anxious when we’re under a tornado watch. We’ve had some come within miles of us. We actually didn’t plan our floor plan with tornados in mind since we have no rooms with only interior walls. All we have is a large hallway. I missed school one day when I was in 8th grade because there was a hurricane coming. My mom actually told me she wanted me home that day. Thank goodness for mother’s intuition because a tornado touched down on the football field at the school I attended. I would have been in one of the classrooms adjacent to the football field. The school was only several miles away from where we lived, too. That’s the closest I ever wish to be to a tornado!
The county I live in and work as a firefighter/emt. On a Palm Sunday we had three tornadoes to come through the county. One of the tornadoes destroyed a small church. But it left behind an intact pulpit with the bible still sitting on it. On the other side of the road about 75 yards. From the church and about 45 yards from a small store. Sat a 10,000 liquid propane tank that at that time full. It destroyed the church and the store. But left the tank alone.
In 2017 my roommate and I were directly hit with a f3 tornado with 157 mile an hour winds. We sheltered in our bathroom. It isn't no joke. Our neighborhood was destroyed. My 90yr old next door neighbor had a 2 inch rod stuck in her pillow were she was sleeping. She got up in time to take cover. My other 90yr old neighbor across the street had someones patio slab hanging off her roof. She sheltered in a back bedroom with a blanket over her. Thank goodness no was killed. Both our duplex had to be torn down. It did 12000 dollars of damage to my truck. There were cars turned over everywhere. People please take them seriously!
Last Saturday, we had a tornadic outbreak here in Oklahoma. I think I read 27 tornados occurred that day. What was scary was that many of them formed after dark. Before all the equipment we have now, you could only detect a tornado by the power flashes when the tornado hit an electrical transformer. Now the weather ppl can tell there's a potential tornado by Doppler radar and other detection equipment. One almost sure way is if a debris cloud is detected several thousand feet in the air. Our poor weather forecasters started their day at about 10 am to well after midnight. When a tornado watch is issued, we're all watching some type of weather news feed.
I was actually in little rock when that one happened in 2023... and yes, i did run in my truck and luckily got away from it. Had to do about 90+ mph
Those were actually small ones compared to some
The EF5 in OK was 2.6 MILES wide
Not all of us have basements or shelters, we just bought our house and haven't had a chance to put one in yet, today we're under 4 of 5 on tornadoes possibly moving through, dramatic as it sounds i just hope I'm still alive this time tomorrow.
Now is 5 out of 5 with the NWS saying EF3+ long track tornados are likely
@realixx9375 yeah I'm watching closely, my son was released from school early, businesses are shutting down for the day, really hope it's nothing.
Check out the 1974 outbreak as well. 148 tornadoes spread over 13 states, with 319 lives lost, including 77 people in Alabama. I was 6 and I remember that night we had people show up to our storm pit that mever showed before in their life. We saw 7 tornadoes in the distance that night. They were all following the same path. Super far away but they were so big they were seen for miles. Thank God that path didn come to our storm pit.
I live in Florida and we get hurricanes and tornadoes ( not like tornado alley) and I would take a hurricane over a tornado any day
❤❤❤❤😮😢😢
Some of the films were obviously from surveillance videos, probably on buildings.
EF-5 is the worst on the Enhanced Fujita intensity scale, which is based on damage. The reason being that you can't really have damage worse than an EF-5. The original Fujita scale went up to F6, of which there were only two or three. The Torro magnitude scale goes up to T12+, implying that there could be something even stronger.
I've been through several and chased a few. What I can tell you is that they are very windy but usually pretty easy to dodge.
I can’t imagine what that’s like. We live in the Pacific NW we had Mt. St Helen’s eruption in 1980 and we’ve had a few earthquakes but nothing like a big tornado. I wouldn’t want to live in the mid-west where they get so many.
160 a year? 😂😂😂 Oklahoma had that much just last month 🤷
I have never understood people that stand and watch a tornado moving close to them. Even if it appears it's going away from you it can shift in an instant and go a different direction. We had one go over our house but thank God not touch down. It got quiet, and creepy still as we looked outside and suddenly ALL the birds in our yard flew to the ground at the same time. We went straight to the basement. And it went over us as I said and thank God it didn't shift and touch down.
Us Americans are hell 😂 we'll watch a tornado all the way until it hits our front yard and then be like "OH SHXXXXXTTT" then run inside as fast as possible
Bathrooms. Make sure you have a batht
Search on youtube, "Dashcam footage captures tornado destroying Nebraska building"
Car dashcam in the parking lot of the plastics factory being destroyed up close and personal this year.
Swirly whirls
Now I’m glad we only live a handful of meters below seelevel 🙄🤨
If it ain't moving run
Dont live in Tornado alley, I will take snow any day in WNY
This first event sounded like people from California or Jersey transplanted to tornado alley. I feel bad for them, but honestly if you and your family are alive that’s all that matters
Having said that, we are all a little concerned w so many Californians moving here.
And people refuse to pay just a little more when they build a house, or nothing more than normal, to have a tornado proof house. Completely bizarre attitude.
What is a tornado proof house? Never heard of that.
@@nanadeborah8717 It's a structure that cannot be harmed by a tornado. Built everyday in the USA. FEMA pays for them if built as a public building like a school or hospital. Schools build them in tornado alley. ALL over the news for DECADES. Monolithic Domes
@@nanadeborah8717 My reply was deleted. Tornado proof houses have been being built in the USA for decades. FEMA pays for public building that are built using the technology. look up monolithic dome
Have you watched the MOVIE TWISTER? you should great movie
Who the hell is Autumn and why are you worried about them now. LOL
Sorry to burst your bubble mate, but Australia gets about 60 twisters a year, they just almost always hit the outback.
:)
WHO THE HELL IS AUTUMN!!!!!!!!!!