Historic outbreak Sunday: The aftermath
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It's interesting to compare the strength of each tornado against its size and track. Logic would state that the largest and longest track tornadoes would be the strongest, but not so. For example, look at the one that tracked 40 miles through Barton, Dade, Cedar, Polk, and Hickory counties in SW MO. It was only a weak F0 and 30 yards wide.
A THIRD TORNADO TOUCHDOWN OCCURRED FROM BOSTON MISSOURI (BARTON
COUNTY) TO 3 MILES EAST OF WEAUBLEAU (HICKORY COUNTY). THIS TORNADO
DID NOT TOUCH THE GROUND VERY MUCH BUT TREE DAMAGE WAS EVIDENT ALONG
ITS 40 MILE TRACK. ITS MAXIMUM WIDTH WAS ABOUT 30 YARDS WIDE AND
INTENSITY LEVEL WAS ON THE LOW END OF F0. AN ADDITIONAL SURVEY WILL
BE ACCOMPLISHED ALONG THIS TRACK TO DETERMINE OTHER MORE SPECIFIC
DAMAGE.
MAXIMUM INTENSITY: F0
MAXIMUM WIDTH: 30 YARDS
TOTAL PATH LENGTH: 40 MILES
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I am not trying to be argumentative here at all. I rather have a 'copter in the sky in addition to the eyes on the ground. I think that the guys in the 'copters can see a lot. I don't think that you all really get how thse guys handle the storms.. They do NOT fly into the storms. They are 3 to 5 miles from the storm. They are not idiots. It is no different than someone on the ground. This is just my take.
Kristi

Kristi
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- wxmann_91
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With the help of this outbreak, the prelim tornado count for March has already exceeded the tornado count from May of last year. This is probably overestimated by around 50-60, even so, that lands us with ~110 tornadoes. Frighteningly, this is comparable to the 115 from May (that is a final count). And another event could easily push our tornado total well past that.
For comparison, the three-year average for March is 49 tornadoes, and for May 389 tornadoes.
For comparison, the three-year average for March is 49 tornadoes, and for May 389 tornadoes.
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- WaitingForSiren
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- wxmann_91
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Geez that's Crazy...
If even only half of the reports are confirmed tornadoes, that will be a huge outbreak.
And 666, that's plain creepy.
48 tornadoes confirmed from this outbreak, one less than the normal entire March average (that occurred in one day!).
Other big outbreak days:
3/9: 6
3/11:12
3/13: 8
This brings the total of confirmed March tornadoes to 74. We might see a couple of more events before March ends.
(info of confirmed tornadoes courtesy of Sam Sagnella's website)
If even only half of the reports are confirmed tornadoes, that will be a huge outbreak.
And 666, that's plain creepy.
48 tornadoes confirmed from this outbreak, one less than the normal entire March average (that occurred in one day!).
Other big outbreak days:
3/9: 6
3/11:12
3/13: 8
This brings the total of confirmed March tornadoes to 74. We might see a couple of more events before March ends.
(info of confirmed tornadoes courtesy of Sam Sagnella's website)
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As for the total number of confirmed tornado reports, if we're talking 71 tornadoes confirmed in this outbreak, then this would be the largest March tornado outbreak ever. An outbreak in March 1976 produced 68 tornadoes and it appears we will surpass that number making this the biggest tornado outbreak ever in March in the United States.
Amazing to see that the same areas that got severe wx last weekend could see snow SUNDAY night into MONDAY. As calender spring starts in the midwest and central plains, it sure doesn't feel like it.
Jim
Amazing to see that the same areas that got severe wx last weekend could see snow SUNDAY night into MONDAY. As calender spring starts in the midwest and central plains, it sure doesn't feel like it.
Jim
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- george_r_1961
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simplykristi wrote:I am not trying to be argumentative here at all. I rather have a 'copter in the sky in addition to the eyes on the ground. I think that the guys in the 'copters can see a lot. I don't think that you all really get how thse guys handle the storms.. They do NOT fly into the storms. They are 3 to 5 miles from the storm. They are not idiots. It is no different than someone on the ground. This is just my take.
Kristi
Kristi another danger from being too close to a thunderstorm is lightning. Lighting has been known to strike many miles away from the storm. If a helicopter gets hit its all over for the crew and any one the ground where it crashes.
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- Gorky
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I don't think helicopters are particularly susceptible to lightning. I've only heard of 1 plane being brought down by lightning, and never heard of a helicopter being taken down. Planes and Helicopters get hit all the time by lightning so I'm sure I would have heard about this more often if it was an issue
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- Professional-Met
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