Brit Reacts To The Top 10 Most INFAMOUS F5 Tornados In The USA



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Original video – https://youtu.be/cUteQeWRFHY?si=0_RC5OHYphcoMjs-

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39 thoughts on “Brit Reacts To The Top 10 Most INFAMOUS F5 Tornados In The USA”

  1. Tornadoes occur when warm moist air from the gulf meets with cold dry air from the Rocky Mountains (Massively simplified).

    More specifically, you need wind shear, usually a dry line where dry air borders moist air, a sunny day, instability in the air (represented as joules per kilogram), etc. If you have all of these main ingredients, you just need a discrete (alone, away from other storms, although some of these tornado producing storms (supercells) are embedded in other storms, such as a squall line) thunderstorm, or a supercell, to take advantage of these ingredients and produce a tornado.

    The actual physics of why and how tornadoes form is actually still a mystery. We just know the ingredients needed to produce tornadoes. There are some theories in how they form specifically, but it is still largely unknown.

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  2. The Bridge Creek / Moore tornado – I've heard the wind speed here is 300 – 320 mph. Other sites have said 318-321 mph. Is there a true official speed?

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  3. The scariest part to me about these beasts is that they can enter one side of a town of 1200 and already have completely swept through in under 15 seconds completely devastating anything in it's path

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  4. I saw the storm for Joplin from my house in Kansas. I'd just graduated high school the day or two before. I still remember my grandpa calling us to tell us Joplin had gotten hit by a tornado and that it was bad. The college I attended helped with the clean up. I have friends who survived it, one has PTSD from it. One of the first deaths was a guy that just graduated high school that day. A father tried shielding his kids but the walls of Home Depot collapsed and crushed them. People died in ventilators when the hospital got hit. A woman had her toddler ripped from her arms when the tornado went over their home. Baby was found dead two miles away. People died of a fungus the tornado ripped out of deep soil. People committed suicide in the months after. Domestic violence shelters were overwhelmed in the after. I'm 31 now and will never forget that event. You just can't. I knew what Joplin looked like before and after and the healing. Land is healing still but the people will always live when that scar in their memories.

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  5. Tornado become when the sky is cold and humidity for the ground make a weird spinning motion and then it’ll just touch the ground. You can probably look it up and get a better summary, but it’s something like that.

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  6. Loved your reaction to this, I honestly can never get enough tornado reaction videos. They’re terrifying as heck. Thankfully the UK doesn’t get EF5-caliber storms. I think the biggest tornado your country has ever seen was rated EF3, wasn’t it? Though I might recall a really old incident that was bigger…maybe during the 13th century. 🤔

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  7. Dude your channel might grow even more if 1). you STOPPED abusing the name of Jesus Christ (definite offense to a large populace of people who reverence Him, and 2). STOP dropping the F- Bombs. Each of these missteps distract from any relevant reaction you are attempting to offer.

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  8. Make sure you cut out Swegle's introduction and don't link to his stuff. Would be awful if the original content creator got even a smidge of respect from you.

    Swegle Studios, everybody. Go watch his stuff.

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  9. Im from Kansas, And I've already had 2 Tornado warnings this year and more than 5 tornado watches. These are common and I've (luckily) Never had a destructive tornado hit my town. There have been tornados in Kansas And Oklahoma that are MILES wide. The Greensburg F5 was over a mile wide which was bigger then the entire town it hit. A tornado in that same storm was 2 miles wide, but luckily never really hit a town. The largest tornado, The 2013 El Reno Tornado, was 2.6 Miles wide.

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  10. I live within a mile of where the Bridge Creek Moore tornado was. First time I was ever scared. I helped with the clean up. Our church took in people. At the time I lived in Midwest City, which borders Del City, It actually hit a bit of us too. I was underground for that event.

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  11. 3:49 Scientists still don’t entirely know how they form but mainly they form from Supercell thunderstorms at the point where the wind at the bottom starts to increase and pressure lowers and that gives the look of the funnel in a tornado

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  12. I live in Missouri, but nowhere near Joplin. Probably 2 hours away, actually. I was young at the time, but I still remember it. I was over at my Abuelas house for one of my cousins' birthday parties, and the sky was clear, barely any cloud insight. A few minutes had passed, and I looked outside. The sky was an ugly shade of yellow, green, and kinda black. My abuela had turned on the news channel, and that's when we discovered the Joplin tornado and that it was an EF5. Remind you, I live two hours away from Joplin, but our tornado sirens were going off, and we were under a tornado warning. It was terrifying, the sound of the hail, the sight of lightning followed by loud crashes of thunder and the high wind speeds making the tree branches hit my abuelas house, which made it sound like a horror movie😭

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  13. It’s OK that you are not that knowledgeable about tornadoes. We kind of HAVE to be knowledgeable in the U.S. since it’s an annual threat. VERY basic description is warm moist air flowing from the Gulf Of Mexico into the plains and central United States. When this warm moist air collides with a diving cold front moving from north to south/southeast combined with a potent
    Jet stream you get instability which leads to swirling winds. If these winds tilt and make contact with the swirling winds at the ground, that’s
    usually the genesis of a tornado. Again, this is a very amateur explanation, but, hopefully it gives you an idea how tornadoes can form. BTW, my uncle survived the June 9, 1953 Worcester Massachusetts F4 behemoth tornado. He was a student at Assumption College and was cleaning out his dorm room to head home for the summer break when the tornado tore through the college campus WITHOUT any warning whatsoever. 21 years later, he survived a second and even more destructive event on April 3, 1974 in Xenia, Ohio when an F5 monster destroyed a huge part of the city including the newly built home of my Uncle and Aunt and my 4 cousins in the Arrowhead subdivision in Xenia.

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  14. As someone from Ohio. We have all sorts of different climates and weather. Actually, a few years later of the tornado outbreak, my area (complete opposite corner from Xeina). We had a blizzard that killed a lot of people.

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  15. It is worth noting that when the tri- state tornado happened, the us weather service was banned from using the word 'tornado' so as not to incur panic. So many of the victims mayn't have known what was coming.

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  16. Tornadoes form from a warm front meeting a cold front (same as thunderstorms in general). The difference is low atmospheric pressure in the area where the fronts meet, allowing the storm cell to be influenced by the clash of the two fronts, creating circulation, and eventually a funnel cloud forms (like you said, a cyclone in the clouds). If the circulating winds touch the ground, you have a tornado.

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  17. You should check out a video by tornadoTRX talking about the rainsville ef5, also known as the forgotten ef5 and possibly one of the closest I would consider qualified to get an ef6 rating created, as it almost sucked out an underground storm shelter.

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  18. No joke, the 2011 Super Outbreak is pretty much Torando 9/11. I watched the Weather Channel that whole day and seeing monster after monster pop up was… chilling.

    Edit: Forget rebuilding the houses; they’ve remade whole towns. Just look up Greenburg, KS. Normally people exaggerate and say “the town was destroyed”. Greensburg was literally erased off the map; it didn’t exist for a while.

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