B Doss
EF2
It did shift rather suddenly (Bob, thank you for you eye-witness report). I wasn't there, but from the images and videos, I also felt that Tim and his team were in a quite peculiar location relative to this tornado. A storm's tendency to shift E-SE should never be an expectation of it's behavior.
"Mr. Samaras invented remote instruments that were perfectly good at getting everything of scientific import out of the inside of tornadoes (including useful video footage), but that wasn't good enough. . .And now thanks to the ubiquitous "armored vehicles", Everest has been climbed. Practically the only thing that's left is driving straight through a twister with some normal vehicle; and slowly, that's what people are moving towards - and no matter what some of us would rather believe, most of them as you observed are NOT "local yahoos". Take a look at the names of the youtube channels."
Jake, no feathers were ruffled. I think you and me are really coming to a similar conclusion and I think we all need to take a very objective view at what happened. Tim's scientific work, and his recording of 100mb drop in the 2003 Manchester tornado is the best quantitative piece of data we've been given since the sampling of wind speed near the surface by DOW in 1999, argumentatively, Tim's findings are perhaps even more impressive. He was a true scientist and intellectual by his very nature and we'll be missed.
"Mr. Samaras invented remote instruments that were perfectly good at getting everything of scientific import out of the inside of tornadoes (including useful video footage), but that wasn't good enough. . .And now thanks to the ubiquitous "armored vehicles", Everest has been climbed. Practically the only thing that's left is driving straight through a twister with some normal vehicle; and slowly, that's what people are moving towards - and no matter what some of us would rather believe, most of them as you observed are NOT "local yahoos". Take a look at the names of the youtube channels."
Jake, no feathers were ruffled. I think you and me are really coming to a similar conclusion and I think we all need to take a very objective view at what happened. Tim's scientific work, and his recording of 100mb drop in the 2003 Manchester tornado is the best quantitative piece of data we've been given since the sampling of wind speed near the surface by DOW in 1999, argumentatively, Tim's findings are perhaps even more impressive. He was a true scientist and intellectual by his very nature and we'll be missed.