youngwerther
Banned
What the fuck are you talking about?
What the fuck are you talking about?
Do you think an F5 tornado is like a game of Battleships or something?
I understand that. But I feel that due to the engineering of them.
These.
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Would hold up better than this.
I know the winds are very powerful but the difference in engineering must have a difference. 4 walls for debris to hit vs 2. In a row house I can position myself against a wall that isn't feeling the full force of the storm vs a free standing home. I know both will receive damage but I believe the row homes would fare better.
The surface area of a row home that is experiencing the full winds and debris of the storm is less than a free standing home and it seems that physics would back up the idea of less damage.
Large section of an apartment building was swept completely away. A 34-ton railroad trestle support structure was thrown 100 feet up a hill, and 35.8-ton coal car was thrown 391 feet.
No, just No
2011 Tuscaloosa Tornado an EF4 (under criticism, because 64 dead from it alone and 2nd or 3rd costliest tornado ever, should be an easy EF5)
That was from between 180 and 190 mph winds.
I think the part that annoyed me was when you started throwing around phrases like "the difference in engineering must have a difference" and "structural integrity" when you aren't actually basing this on anything other than conjecture.
Due to shared walls a row house would only have the front wall and rear wall exposed to the storm winds. You would not have the risk of debris or wind hitting the interior walls thus providing those two walls extra strength. Because of this less surface area of your home is exposed to the winds and debris. Is it really that hard to comprehend?
Basically, the only way to protect dwellings from a tornado is to build everything under ground.
It would seem the engineering, materials, and cost required to even begin attempting to build a "tornado-proof" house is worlds beyond what is feasibly possible or reasonable. What would be more reasonable would be more research into making affordable and easy-to-construct safe rooms.I'm basing it on the idea which I refuse in that the engineering of a building has ZERO impact on the overall damage.
"8/10 destruction vs a free standing 9/10 destruction"
"frankly insuffiecient to me"
"Given all the variables of construction"
"I refuse to believe"
Is this a joke? If I'm being trolled just tell me. I'll let it happen but just tell me.
it flattened a school.. and no, it would turn everything inside those homes into swiss cheese from the debris. your best luck is literally underground, locked in.
It would seem the engineering, materials, and cost required to even begin attempting to build a "tornado-proof" house is worlds beyond what is feasibly possible or reasonable.
I'm saying one that can withstand the force of such a tornado, or even reduce the damage to such an extent for the costs/engineering to be worth it.I'm NOT saying tornado proof.
Sort of. Basements are the way to go in this area.
I am talking about the difference between half a wall standing and no wall standing.
Jesus. I'm not debating these things. I'm simply trying to see if a difference in structure would affect damage from a storm. You guys apparently believe that no matter what the design of the structure they will all suffer exactly the same from a storm. I guess I need to make myself clearer. I am talking about the difference between half a wall standing and no wall standing.
Half a wall vs no wall is basically the same thing; both houses are totaled, in both homeowners were just as likely to lose their lives if they didn't seek shelter.
no one is arguing that a structure can survive, but why risk it? even if a building is standing, inside would be absolute chaos if it were to be hit. broken glass, metal, wood, etc become like bullets.
Rebecca drove in the opposite direction as the tornado and escaped, returning to the house about 45 minutes later to see whether her cats had survived, only to find her husband there, searching for her and their son in the rubble that had been their home.
We just burst into tears. It was awesome, Rebecca told Wolf.
Well, youre blessed. Brian, your husband, is blessed. Anders is blessed. . . . Were happy youre here. You guys did a great job and I guess you got to thank the Lord, right? Wolf wondered.
Yeah, Rebecca said, noncommittally.
Do you thank the Lord for that split-second decision? Wolf pressed.
I-Im-Im-Im actually an atheist, Rebecca responded, apologetically.
You are? Alright, dont thank the Lord, said Wolf.
And this I guess is the disconnect. I'm not talking about human survival, just structural integrity.
It is simply a thought on structural integrity.
And this I guess is the disconnect. I'm not talking about human survival, just structural integrity.
Damn, those trees look like they're almost stripped of bark.
No, just No
2011 Tuscaloosa Tornado an EF4 (under criticism, because 64 dead from it alone and 2nd or 3rd costliest tornado ever, should be an easy EF5)
I'm an atheist in Oklahoma too.http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs...62e07fe-c269-11e2-914f-a7aba60512a7_blog.html
Lol, you go, girl. Actually a little surprised to see an atheist in Oklahoma. Hope she doesn't get flack from her family.
Does anyone else think Ricky Gervais' tweet earlier was kind of douchy?
This whole situation makes me very sad. I hope everyone can get through this and get back on their feet soon.
Does anyone else think Ricky Gervais' tweet earlier was kind of douchy?
This whole situation makes me very sad. I hope everyone can get through this and get back on their feet soon.
They more than likely are. There are still tree 'remnants' like that around here stripped of bark. There were also some streets here where patches of pavement was ripped up (from the April 27th storm).
I live in Pleasant Grove, which is where it hit after it left Tuscaloosa and Concord/Hueytown. It was at it's peak strength when it hit here as there were homes that even the foundation was gone and basements collapsed. IMO it was an F5 as it went through here; that was something I will NEVER forget.
I understand that. My post isn't that damage will be severe. It is simple in regards to the severity of destruction. Even if a row house was a 8/10 destruction vs a free standing 9/10 destruction that is a difference. To simply claim that all building, all designs and all methods of engineering perform the same in a tornado is frankly insuffiecient to me because given all the variables of construction I refuse to believe that the damage is uniform regardless of the engineering behind the structure.
I'm basing it on the idea which I refuse in that the engineering of a building has ZERO impact on the overall damage.
No, I think it was hilarious and needed to be said. I'm tired of people offering their prayers as help. Your prayers will do exactly jackshit.
I've been hearing that basements aren't common in the area that was hit. Why on earth would basements not be pretty much mandatory in all of Oklahoma and the rest of that area of the country that are hit with devastating tornadoes every year? I live in Indiana and I'm surprised at how few houses around here have basements when we have severe storms every year.
I'm saying one that can withstand the force of such a tornado, or even reduce the damage to such an extent for the costs/engineering to be worth it.
EDIT: Maybe something like this would interest you.
This or this would be more realistic, though.
I understand that. My post isn't that damage will be severe. It is simple in regards to the severity of destruction. Even if a row house was a 8/10 destruction vs a free standing 9/10 destruction that is a difference. To simply claim that all building, all designs and all methods of engineering perform the same in a tornado is frankly insuffiecient to me because given all the variables of construction I refuse to believe that the damage is uniform regardless of the engineering behind the structure.
I'm basing it on the idea which I refuse in that the engineering of a building has ZERO impact on the overall damage.
lol really? bent steel but the aluminum shack next to them is fine.
It's not bullshit, it actually is harder to build a basement in Oklahoma than in many other places. The red clay soil is extremely susceptible to water and heat (as a homeowner, I can verify this) so basements are extremely prone to cracking and leaking. Nobody said it's impossible, but there are real reasons that there are few basements.So this thread is full of know-it-alls claiming building a basement is "impossible" or "unfeasible" in Oklahoma. Turns out, that was a massive load of bull.
NYT had a large article today about it. The cost? A paltry $4,000 in a new home.
And only 10% of the homes build which were destroyed last time have one. Oklahoma refuses to regulate Tornado safety standards - not even schools are required to have any shelter.
So this thread is full of know-it-alls claiming building a basement is "impossible" or "unfeasible" in Oklahoma. Turns out, that was a massive load of bull.
NYT had a large article today about it. The cost? A paltry $4,000 in a new home.
And only 10% of the homes build which were destroyed last time have one. Oklahoma refuses to regulate Tornado safety standards - not even schools are required to have any shelter.