Glen Romine
EF5
Doswell may have found it... Too damn cheap to fly in the survey team.
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Pride could have as much to do with it as money. It would be embarrassing to call in the QRT and have them berate you for wasting there time with damage below the criteria for F4/5.
Likely? Likely much higher. Let me see. Hurricane Charley had 145 mph sustained winds and the homes in Punta Gorda didn't get flattened like those in TX.
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The construction practices in hurricane prone FL are hardly comparable to those of rural north Texas. Hurricane winds are also largely horizontal (there are believed to be considerable vertical velocities near the ground in tornadoes) - strongest in a very small swath, and almost never actually measured but inferred based on merging the observations with models, and based on an assumed surface of WATER and not the much rougher land surface that considerably slows the winds. So - it is non-trivial to compare wind damage from a hurricane with those from a tornado to infer wind speeds for a number of factors.
I liked Chuck's essay as well - frank as usual, and agree also that the EF scale really blows (pun intended) in terms of getting meaningful information from the tornado database, despite the well intentions of those who are promoting it.
Glen