plasticup wrote:Don't know if this has already been posted, but a satellite image gives a perspective I'd never seen before:
It looks like it created it's own highway.

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plasticup wrote:Don't know if this has already been posted, but a satellite image gives a perspective I'd never seen before:
Stephanie wrote:plasticup wrote:Don't know if this has already been posted, but a satellite image gives a perspective I'd never seen before:
It looks like it created it's own highway.
brunota2003 wrote:Maybe not even basements...but steel reinforced concrete rooms. The 1999 OKC Tornado, a lady survived because she turned her closet into a safe room...the concrete was a couple feet thick, with steel about an inch or so thick through the concrete every foot (both horizontally and vertically). It was on Tornado Diary on TWC last night.
In a lot of areas in the south, we can't have basements because of flooding (the hole literally becomes a pool, and stays that way, due to the water table being near the surface). Would one of those steel or steel reinforced concrete rooms be a good alternative? I think so. If they are properly built and anchored into the ground, they can survive darn near anything.
brunota2003 wrote:Safe rooms can also be used for things like closets, when they are not being used as a safe room. I would personally use my safe room to house all of my supplies in (whether it be hurricane supplies, food, water, medical supplies, etc). Being a weather geek too, I would definitely also set it up as my "weather" room (war room lol). I would have a computer with internet, along with a tv, weather radio, and of course the console to my weather station.
My parents were able to stay in touch with me when a tornado warned storm passed just to their north because they have a laptop and their internet is dial up. The power went out, but the laptop stayed on, and because they weren't using a modem (and the telephone wires weren't cut), they kept their internet. That allowed me to try to keep them updated about the storm, whereas otherwise they would of been in the dark, minus what the weather radio would tell them...they live in a trailer, and they do not have any kind of safe room yet, so information is vital.
brunota2003 wrote:Safe rooms can also be used for things like closets, when they are not being used as a safe room. I would personally use my safe room to house all of my supplies in (whether it be hurricane supplies, food, water, medical supplies, etc). Being a weather geek too, I would definitely also set it up as my "weather" room (war room lol). I would have a computer with internet, along with a tv, weather radio, and of course the console to my weather station.
My parents were able to stay in touch with me when a tornado warned storm passed just to their north because they have a laptop and their internet is dial up. The power went out, but the laptop stayed on, and because they weren't using a modem (and the telephone wires weren't cut), they kept their internet. That allowed me to try to keep them updated about the storm, whereas otherwise they would of been in the dark, minus what the weather radio would tell them...they live in a trailer, and they do not have any kind of safe room yet, so information is vital.
RL3AO wrote:Going to be only the second day with at least three (E)F5s.
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