I doubt many heard of this extremely powerful tornado, by the grace of God it didn’t hit any structures and nobody was hurt.
the author of the post below makes a valid argument that the current tornado rating scale is insufficient. A better method would be to add an intensity value, Tornado Intensity (TI 1-5). Do a tornado like this would be rated EF-0 TI-5. Seems logical and would accurately evaluate powerful tornados such as this.
This is just mind blowing, the EF scale needs to be amended (very likely will in 2 years)...
Late last night one of the most powerful tornadoes on Earth ever occurred just east of Hollister, Oklahoma. It had gate to gate velocities over 260 mph. It had a vortex hole similar to an eye of a hurricane, and swirl could be seen at 18,000 feet. It ranked number 2 of all time via rotational velocities. Anything this would have hit, and I mean ANYTHING would have been completely gone/missing.....Thankfully it hit nothing over open fields. We need an intensity scale, like we do with hurricanes, not a damage only based scale.
the author of the post below makes a valid argument that the current tornado rating scale is insufficient. A better method would be to add an intensity value, Tornado Intensity (TI 1-5). Do a tornado like this would be rated EF-0 TI-5. Seems logical and would accurately evaluate powerful tornados such as this.
This is just mind blowing, the EF scale needs to be amended (very likely will in 2 years)...
Late last night one of the most powerful tornadoes on Earth ever occurred just east of Hollister, Oklahoma. It had gate to gate velocities over 260 mph. It had a vortex hole similar to an eye of a hurricane, and swirl could be seen at 18,000 feet. It ranked number 2 of all time via rotational velocities. Anything this would have hit, and I mean ANYTHING would have been completely gone/missing.....Thankfully it hit nothing over open fields. We need an intensity scale, like we do with hurricanes, not a damage only based scale.
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