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Today marks the 13th anniversary of the start of the April 25-28, 2011 Super Outbreak

Posted on 4/25/24 at 9:33 am
Posted by RollTide1987
Augusta, GA
Member since Nov 2009
65086 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 9:33 am
“The individual tornado paths from the April 25-28, 2011, Super Outbreak added up to an almost unfathomable 3,200 path miles, by far the greatest of any U.S. outbreak. This total path was over 600 miles longer than the April 3-4, 1974, Super Outbreak.” – Dr. Greg Forbes

- 362 confirmed tornadoes
- 4 rated EF5; 11 rated EF4; 21 rated EF3
- 207 tornadoes on April 27 (most in a 24-hour period)
- 324 fatalities; 3100+ injuries
- Estimated $12 billion in damages



This post was edited on 4/25/24 at 9:34 am
Posted by CleverUserName
Member since Oct 2016
12617 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 11:52 am to
I remember looking at my weather radar app that day and seeing the EF5 on radar that hit Smithville, MS head on. It was so clear on radar a child could point out where it was.



^ That red SUV was picked up, tossed a half of a mile, hit and dented the water tower in town, bounced off the tower, and fell a quarter of a mile from the tower into the condition you see it. Luckily no one was a passenger for that ride. You can see the tower it hit in the background.



^dent in tower.

This post was edited on 4/25/24 at 11:57 am
Posted by George Dickel
Member since Jun 2019
1587 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 11:56 am to
Remember it well in Dixie Alley in north AL. Bad times.
Posted by LegendInMyMind
Member since Apr 2019
54060 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 12:01 pm to
quote:

I remember looking at my weather radar app that day and seeing the EF5 on radar that hit Smithville, MS head on. It was so clear on radar a child could point out where it was.

If you want to read one of the best tornado surveys out there, go give Tornado Talk a couple bucks on Patreon. A kid named Nelson Tucker (I think he was 17 at the time he did the survey) put together maybe the best survey I've read on the Smithville tornado. I'm almost positive it is behind their paywall, though. They do good work over there and have a large catalogue of storm and event surveys now.

This was from a home that just missed a direct hit from the Smithville, MS tornado, it still took some damage. The curtains were visible outside the home, tattered, but flapping in the breeze.
This post was edited on 4/25/24 at 12:06 pm
Posted by CleverUserName
Member since Oct 2016
12617 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 12:29 pm to
Based on the damage survey and the ground scouring of multiple feet in some areas.. the winds of that tornado was estimated 300 plus.

It takes 200 MPH winds to be considered EF5.

So basically, this tornado was the jump beyond from a basic EF5 the same that a jump is from a full strength EF1 to borderline EF2 is to a EF5. So take in consideration how much worse an EF5 is than a strong EF1- base EF2, and make that same jump from a base EF5 into what that tornado was.


Astounding that only 16 people died in Smithville.
This post was edited on 4/25/24 at 12:35 pm
Posted by Pisco
Mayfield, Kentucky
Member since Dec 2019
3756 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 12:30 pm to
My sister and brother in law live in Moundville and they mostly all went North of them. I watched Spann on the live stream as it came into Tuscaloosa.

I called my sister (no pics) that morning and told her I had a very bad feeling. Her phone rang off the hook that Friday the 27th.
Posted by kciDAtaE
Member since Apr 2017
15759 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 12:36 pm to
quote:

dent in tower.


I would have thought a flying SUV would have done more damage to the tower.
Posted by LegendInMyMind
Member since Apr 2019
54060 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 12:41 pm to
quote:

Based on the damage survey and the ground scouring of multiple feet in some areas.. the winds of that tornado was estimated 300 plus.

I'm of the opinion that it was the strongest tornado that day, and ranks up there with the strongest ever.

quote:

Astounding that only 16 people died in Smithville.

It helped that Smithville was a small town with a small population. That storm was moving, too. Thankfully, it didn't stay down as long as some of the others that day.

ETA: The most impressive damage, IMO, was not just the granulated debris, but the damage that granulated debris actially caused. Brand new, slick concrete came out looking 100 years old, weathered and pockmarked, like it had spent considerable time in a sandblaster. Then, think about how that happened in a matter of seconds, not years or decades.
This post was edited on 4/25/24 at 12:45 pm
Posted by CleverUserName
Member since Oct 2016
12617 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 12:43 pm to
quote:

I would have thought a flying SUV would have done more damage to the tower.


It probably wasn’t a perpendicular direct hit. Like a hard glancing strike.

And those towers are built. This top heavy tower stood in the face of one of the most violent tornadoes recorded in the US.
Posted by Darth_Vader
A galaxy far, far away
Member since Dec 2011
64563 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 12:46 pm to
Wasn’t this when the mammoth EF5 tore through Tuscaloosa and just barely missed Bryant-Denny? If so, I remember that day vividly. My office had closed early so I was in my living room watching coverage of the monster tornado tearing though Tuscaloosa. One of my neighbors called me and told me to come outside. When I went out in the yard, you could see the clouds flying by overhead unusually low and really fast. You could see debris blowing along with it, mostly pieces of pink insulation. Bits of paper was coming down almost like a light snow. Later we found a phone bill in my driveway from a chicken farm close to Tuscaloosa. One of my neighbors found a small child’s shoe in her yard. And I live 95 miles northeast of Tuscaloosa!
This post was edited on 4/25/24 at 12:49 pm
Posted by LegendInMyMind
Member since Apr 2019
54060 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 12:47 pm to
quote:

Wasn’t this when the mammoth EF5 tore through Tuscaloosa and just barely missed Bryant-Denny?

It was an EF4, but yes, that was the day.
Posted by Darth_Vader
A galaxy far, far away
Member since Dec 2011
64563 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 12:50 pm to
quote:

It was an EF4, but yes, that was the day.


Ok. I just knew that thing was an absolute monster.

Posted by Mstate
Birmingham
Member since Nov 2009
9681 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 12:50 pm to
Tornadoes are scary as frick. Growing up in north MS we had a lot but thankfully never had one in my direct path.

A lot of people don’t seem to understand that tornadoes are more powerful than hurricanes albeit a much smaller storm obviously but they pop up out of nowhere sometimes.

This post was edited on 4/25/24 at 12:52 pm
Posted by CleverUserName
Member since Oct 2016
12617 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 12:56 pm to
It was the same day. The Tuscaloosa tornado was after the Smithville one.

But if the Smithville one went through Tuscaloosa.. it would have been complete, total destruction. The Tuscaloosa tornado was strong, but it didn’t hit EF5. Smithville was 100 mph above EF5.

The Hackleburg - Phil Campbell tornado was stronger than the Tuscaloosa one.

The Tuscaloosa one got more attention of the day because of the more urban area it went through and the tower shots from the TV station.
Posted by RollTide1987
Augusta, GA
Member since Nov 2009
65086 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 1:12 pm to
My own experience that day was one of complete joy followed by one of abject horror. I had never seen a tornado before that day. At that time I was a junior at The University of Alabama and considered myself an amateur storm chaser despite the fact that I had never "intercepted" one before. I came very close back on April 15 when a small EF1 hit the southern part of town, but I ended up not being able to catch it on film. When the modeling and forecast data began to be compiled for April 27, I just knew that was THE day I would have as my chance to finally intercept.

When the first sirens started going off on campus that afternoon, I rushed out of my dorm room where my roommate and best friend commented that he hoped I would get horribly mangled so that I would abandon the craziness of storm chasing. I drove circles around downtown Tuscaloosa for an hour or two, waiting for a cell to get close enough so that I might "chase" it. One went just north of Tuscaloosa and almost drove me away from the city but I didn't like that it was heading to an area with a high density of trees so I opted to remain close to the city.

That's when I noticed the cell that would eventually spawn the Tuscaloosa tornado. It looked like it was on a direct path for the city and so I remained in the downtown area, waiting for it to make its way up to town. As it got closer, I parked my truck near First Baptist Church in downtown and looked off to the southwest. All I saw was the blackest sky you had ever seen and the sound of thunder claps that were so frequent it reminded me of the approach of the T-Rex from the movie Jurassic Park. Other than that I heard not a sound. The birds knew something evil was coming and had gone quiet. The only thing I could hear was the continuous sound of police sirens as they attempted to warn people of the coming danger.

That's when I knew I was in a bad spot. I got back in my truck and drove a short distance to the Public Works Parking Deck where I decided to anchor myself for the storm. It was a reinforced concrete structure that I figured would be able to hold up even if it was directly impacted by an EF5 tornado. The stairwells would offer me enough protection should the worst happen.

And so that is where I stayed. With the First Baptist Church below me and the Tuscaloosa County Court House just off to my right, I watched in awe as the tornado passed from right to left about two miles distant. I got a lot of pictures on my iPhone from the storm, including one that I remain most proud of to this very day:



After the storm passed I was in an absolute state of ecstasy. My adrenaline was running so high. I had never been happier in my life. I had seen my first tornado! Even though I clearly saw massive amounts of debris flying through the air as it passed through my field of view, I didn't even think about the human cost of what had just happened until about an hour later. I drove back to my dorm on the north side of campus, excitedly relayed my tale to my friends, but was brought down to earth when the damage reports started coming in.

That's when I began to realize that this storm had been a deadly one, that it had taken the lives of fellow university students. And there registered a change in me. I think it was that day, for the first time in my young life, I realized that I was a mortal being and that I had been incredibly lucky and reckless. I felt a wave of guilt, knowing that I had foolishly put my life at risk and survived while kids the same age as me, taking all the proper precautions and doing what they needed to do to remain safe, didn't make it through the day alive. It was a humbling realization and one that I think about every year around this time.

Posted by RAB
Member since Aug 2019
986 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 1:14 pm to
I was living in north AL at the time. I've never been in a war zone, but I imagine it is somewhat similar to the evening of April 27. No power. Limited info. Knowing that people are dying somewhere near by. Sirens sounding over and over again. Bad times.
Posted by red sox fan 13
Valley Park
Member since Aug 2018
15349 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 1:16 pm to
The Anchor/Chapel Grove/Wren MS tornado preceding Smithville was an underrated tornado that could have been given EF5: LINK- Tornado Talk

Also, a lot of people forget about the Rainsville, AL EF5 tornado on than day. That thing was nasty.
Posted by Mr Breeze
The Lunatic Fringe
Member since Dec 2010
5952 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 1:29 pm to
quote:

That's when I began to realize that this storm had been a deadly one, that it had taken the lives of fellow university students. And there registered a change in me. I think it was that day, for the first time in my young life, I realized that I was a mortal being and that I had been incredibly lucky and reckless. I felt a wave of guilt, knowing that I had foolishly put my life at risk and survived while kids the same age as me, taking all the proper precautions and doing what they needed to do to remain safe, didn't make it through the day alive. It was a humbling realization and one that I think about every year around this time.

Terrific narrative yet beyond terrible for those affected, and humble story of your experience. Thanks for sharing your perspective.
Posted by LPLGTiger
Member since May 2013
1312 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 1:33 pm to
I was supposed to drive from Chattanooga to Baton Rouge on the 27th. The night before my dad called and said it might be better to just wait a day. Glad I did. Horrible destruction.
Posted by Tigris
Mexican Home
Member since Jul 2005
12357 posts
Posted on 4/25/24 at 2:00 pm to
quote:

This was from a home that just missed a direct hit from the Smithville, MS tornado, it still took some damage. The curtains were visible outside the home, tattered, but flapping in the breeze.


That happened to the house we had just moved from in Tulsa. Tornado lifted the roof, sucked out the curtains, then dropped the roof. Next morning the curtains are outside the house. Not good. Tornado debris plugged the drainage and caused the house to flood too. Today it is a vacant lot that cannot be built on. Nothing lasts forever.
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