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re: This is why the tornado grading scale needs to be changed…
Posted on 5/1/24 at 5:14 pm to RummelTiger
Posted on 5/1/24 at 5:14 pm to RummelTiger
quote:
So...why does the scale need to be changed?
He is saying the rating is based solely on damage not strength.
It would like a hurricane is cat 5 but gets rated as a cat 1 if it does no damage.
They really need 2 scales. Damage scale and strength scale.
Here’s another pic of it
Posted on 5/1/24 at 5:21 pm to OU Guy
What if the scale is biased against people of color?
Posted on 5/1/24 at 5:24 pm to OU Guy
I get why he's saying it.
Playing devil's advocate, if the science community is in agreement with the ranking based on strength and destruction, then why change it just because there was a massive tornado that didn't damage anything?
It would seem to reason that giving the higher ranking due to devastation makes sense.
Why should a strong hurricane that stayed out in open water get the same ranking as a Labor Day, Camille, etc., that actually wrecked shite?
Playing devil's advocate, if the science community is in agreement with the ranking based on strength and destruction, then why change it just because there was a massive tornado that didn't damage anything?
It would seem to reason that giving the higher ranking due to devastation makes sense.
Why should a strong hurricane that stayed out in open water get the same ranking as a Labor Day, Camille, etc., that actually wrecked shite?
Posted on 5/1/24 at 5:40 pm to OU Guy
quote:
They really need 2 scales. Damage scale and strength scale.
How do you implement the strength scale when there won’t be uniform sampling of velocities? The only reason the gate to gate velocity was able to be sampled so well is because it was so close to the 88d. If this same tornado happened in a radar gap then no one would be saying this today.
Posted on 5/1/24 at 5:50 pm to OU Guy
quote:
He is saying the rating is based solely on damage not strength.
Today I learned that the Fujita scale is primarily a damage scale.
Posted on 5/1/24 at 11:29 pm to OU Guy
quote:
They really need 2 scales. Damage scale and strength scale.
I don't think they necessarily do at this point in time. Until we get more radar coverage, or more DOWs in the mix, a strength scale is only going to muddy the waters for the majority of tornadoes. We just don't have perfect radar coverage for every tornado-prducing storm (we never will), so for many tornadoes a "strength scale" would be at best extrapolation, and at worst outright guesswork.
And as far as the screen grab you posted, it awesome. Some of the coolest radar clips I have seen and saved have been from "low-end" tornadoes.
Posted on 5/2/24 at 2:01 pm to OU Guy
I took that as to mean why does the grading scale even matter? Does something happen for a F4 tornado that doesn't happen for a F3?
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