The El Reno Tornado was 2.6 miles wide. There are reports of a 4 mile wide tornado in the 1800s I believe if I remember correctly. The fastest tornado was 94 mph on the ground
El Reno was the biggest and fastest recorded in recent years with 302 mph wind speeds and 2.6mile wide vortex it was the biggest recorded recently. As it was only an EF3 it's huge
@@Url0cal_kennyvr and not even given an EF5 rating because it was in a very rural area with not a lot of structures. When the largest tornado in recorded history doesn't sit at the top of the scale, it's time for a new scale. Because the enhanced Fujita isn't it.
F rating system is wind while EF is damage, I'm not correcting you your totally right just simplifying it for other people and adding F classification into it EF is what is used now.
I don't know why, but in all of these graphic tornado comparison videos, they immediately think that the wider the tornado, the taller the tornado. Wedges are usually supposed to be wider than they are tall, making many of the scaling incorrect.
Tornados don’t actually just get taller like that. Yes some are taller than others but a tornado forms from a lowering of the clouds called the wall cloud. And from there the tornado touches down. What makes a tornado different from another is usually how wide it is and how powerful the winds are. The height is never really a factor for strength or anything else. I get why in the animation they get taller and taller but that’s not realistic at all. Also I know it’s just a video but as someone who has a passion for learning stuff about tornados I like to make sure people have accurate information because these storms kill people and change others lives forever so having a bit of extra or more accuracy knowledge could save someone’s life
El Reno was 2.6 miles wide and in a recent study the multiple vortices in it are thought to be up to over 300 mph also the charts portrayal of tornados only showed cigar and cone tornados even though most of the bigger ones are wedge tornados
Common misconception, a tornado's size doesn't determine its strength. There has been wedge tornadoes that only did EF1 damage. The only thing that determines a tornadoes rating is the damage caused and wind speeds recorded.
The actual size depictions are very wrong, the heights do constantly grow, most of these tornadoes were more like blobs. Considered wedges (wider than tall)
The El Reno Tornado had Multiple Vortices that made it look big, but the actually funnels was in the Center with it being increase from 1 Mile to 2 Miles long, and this tornado was able to kill I believe 3 storm chaser. The El Reno Tornado was classified as the biggest and possibly one of the most dangerous tornados in history and had broken records faster than any other tornado.
My dad used to live in Oklahoma for 10 months and there was always tornadoes, but luckily he always survived them he said he’ll bring me to Oklahoma to see them i’m actually really excited!
In 2020 there was an EF 3 and they said if it went on any longer it would of been an EF4 and this is only in Illinois like what and we heard the tornado drop down on the ground when we were in the basement and the ground shook and since I’m in a complex it was where we keep the bikes so the bikes shook form the hooks above and the tornado just missed our complex and went a couple blocks down and destroyed many houses it was crazy
In southern Ontario we do get Ontario but they are usually to always small and short lived but in Barrie they get a lot bigger and longer lasting tornados but still nothing compared to what happens in the Midwest
So your saying that if the Joplin tornado was a mile wide that means that the vortex would be about as tall as a Supercell Thunderstorm, I don’t even want to tell you the height of one just look it up because it’s insane
Did you know the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923 in Japan created a fire tornado of over 500 meters tall causing more than 38,000 deaths in the span of 15 MINUTES. Like holy hell that was bad.
The Oklahoma tornado is referring to the 1999 bridge creek Moore F5. The Moore F5 was way worse then jarrel, jarrel had estimates around 230 - 290mph winds, while bridge creek Moore had estimates from 300 - 320mph, these winds were recorded while it was on top of bridge creek.
Just had an ef0 that registered 2nd all time gate to gate velocity clocking over 260+mph Hollister Oklahoma. Rural area Thank god but spun an anti cyclonic satellite tornado with it. Had it been urban area people would have died The ef system is not a way to judge size
God create a man on his image. Do other whatever you want be done with you. Four corners of the storage winds of the earth 🌬️💨🧭🌐🌏🌎🌍 bless the Lord. God is the alpha and Omega, and beginning and the end, who from his hand nobody can be delivery. Pilars of the earth bless the Lord. Pillars of the ocean and rivers bless the Lord. 🌬️💨🧭🌊🌊🌊🌐🌏🌎🌍 Who can straighten so much power like God? And without nobody is dead?
I find thunderstorms especially tornadoes very interesting and I’ve always wanted to find out what a tornado looks like inside and in person. I love drama and I am a dangerous loving kid and my dream is to be a tornado chaser or a weather person because I’ve been interested in tornadoes and horrible thunderstorms all my life and I love investigating dangerous storms like tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes, etc. I love protecting all living things. I would risk my life for all you guys.
As a person who lives in Oklahoma I can confirm that our tornadoes are absolutely massive
And I'm one of them
They always are, especially the one from El reno in 2013
@@BermieLostella3003ye I live next to there
@@nobodynothing-ew5vv DUUUUDE I was in 3rd grade when this happened.
@@BermieLostella3003 tbh I had just moved in from Utah at then I was 2 btw
The El Reno Tornado was 2.6 miles wide. There are reports of a 4 mile wide tornado in the 1800s I believe if I remember correctly. The fastest tornado was 94 mph on the ground
no it’s over 200mph. How else would there have been F5S?
the fastest tornado had recorded speeds of 300mph, several EF5s have reached 200-260mph
It was 302 mph lmao
He's talking about forward speed not wind speed.
El Reno was the biggest and fastest recorded in recent years with 302 mph wind speeds and 2.6mile wide vortex it was the biggest recorded recently. As it was only an EF3 it's huge
That truck compared to el reno was way off, the tornado was 2.3 miles wide lol
2.6
No it was 2.6 miles wide with wind speeds of 296-302
@@Url0cal_kennyvr yup… flipping horrifying
@@Url0cal_kennyvr and not even given an EF5 rating because it was in a very rural area with not a lot of structures. When the largest tornado in recorded history doesn't sit at the top of the scale, it's time for a new scale. Because the enhanced Fujita isn't it.
3.9
the average tornado means it's the average size and destruction of that EF rating of tornado
you should change your name to anti theiran (just sayin)
F rating system is wind while EF is damage, I'm not correcting you your totally right just simplifying it for other people and adding F classification into it EF is what is used now.
@@_ambience101not exactly. Both are based primarily off of damage
The truck killed me 💀💀
I don't know why, but in all of these graphic tornado comparison videos, they immediately think that the wider the tornado, the taller the tornado. Wedges are usually supposed to be wider than they are tall, making many of the scaling incorrect.
yeah in reality you wont even be able to the see the giant truck as soon as these tornadoes attain the width of 1 mile
its the average tornado size for that category like (EF1) (EF2) etc.
Yes thats what i was going to say
But i would be surprised if he knew what the enhanced fugita scale is
@@Pixxelen
I would be surprised if he knew what the world looked like outside of his bedroom 🤦🏻♂️🤷🏻♂️
Fr @@PaulyDTheKiwi
Tornados don’t actually just get taller like that. Yes some are taller than others but a tornado forms from a lowering of the clouds called the wall cloud. And from there the tornado touches down. What makes a tornado different from another is usually how wide it is and how powerful the winds are. The height is never really a factor for strength or anything else. I get why in the animation they get taller and taller but that’s not realistic at all. Also I know it’s just a video but as someone who has a passion for learning stuff about tornados I like to make sure people have accurate information because these storms kill people and change others lives forever so having a bit of extra or more accuracy knowledge could save someone’s life
Keep up the good work don’t give up keep up the amazing content I love ur vids so much if u like this vid !
I bet the Ohio Tornado will have aliens in it.
Alien tornado movie: yo we filmed in the wrong state!
There are
as someone from ohio I can tell you our tornadoes are weak, and are by far the most interesting thing to happen here...aliens not withstanding
@@livingcountry6279dude, Ohio died months ago
El Reno was 2.6 miles wide and in a recent study the multiple vortices in it are thought to be up to over 300 mph also the charts portrayal of tornados only showed cigar and cone tornados even though most of the bigger ones are wedge tornados
The Ohio tornado be like💀
Ohio doesn't really get tornados
(Edit) At least my part of ohio.
Phahahaha
It will soon…
Only in Ohio
@@ApolloHeller tell that to 2019 labor day Dayton
@@ApolloHelleryes it does if you knew anything then you would know that ohio gets a lot
This shows that average can be any size
El reno was dropped to a EF3 cause it didn't cause enough structural dmg....
Bro, tornados dont grow because of strength, and they are not all like that shape 🫠
Edit: El reno was wider than it was tall (wedge)
as a storm chaser the el reno one compared to the truck is unaccurate it was 2.3 miles wide
As a storm chaser, whos gonna tell these diagrams are wrong except for f2 f3 and f1
I always find it funny when people talk about the storms and tornadoes we have in oklahoma
Bro all of them combined is a 1% of destruction an average tornado from Ohio can make
I survive real tornado believe me
@@GOBINDA-BARUIcool
strongest ohio twister was Xenia which doesnt come close to the most destructive
@@GOBINDA-BARUI for real?
@@TwoIdiotsPlayHorrorAndMore yeah
I can guarantee you that is not how small a truck was compared to the el reno tornado 💀💀💀
The scale is inaccurate. If we went with this scale the el reno tornado would be all the way up high in earth's atmosphere past the stratosphere.
Common misconception, a tornado's size doesn't determine its strength. There has been wedge tornadoes that only did EF1 damage. The only thing that determines a tornadoes rating is the damage caused and wind speeds recorded.
I remember that tornado video back like in 2017 brings back memories 🥹
That br-creek Moore tornado was so far off, it was wider than it was tall in real life
what can you except these videos barely do any research except the obivous and for some reason act like all tornados are side winders
@@tivinating2 Yeah fair enough
I luv your videos since 2015
I can say in 2019 & 2013 a huge fire whirl hit us, we had to move houses and lost nearly all our stuff…
Jarrell TX 1997 Tornado: wheres the dead man walking
brainrot the jarrell tornado wasn't even that big
@@Uranium255BUT IT WAS OF THE MOST DANGEROUS TORNADOS IN US HISTORY
El Reno is the biggest tornado every recorded EVER
Pretty sure it was the bridge creek tornado
@@FlickerAgoonythat was the tornado with highest windspeeds, the biggest was actually the el reno tornado
it was 2.6 miles wide and 3.4 miles tall, making it the biggest tornado yet
The actual size depictions are very wrong, the heights do constantly grow, most of these tornadoes were more like blobs. Considered wedges (wider than tall)
The El Reno Tornado had Multiple Vortices that made it look big, but the actually funnels was in the Center with it being increase from 1 Mile to 2 Miles long, and this tornado was able to kill I believe 3 storm chaser. The El Reno Tornado was classified as the biggest and possibly one of the most dangerous tornados in history and had broken records faster than any other tornado.
el reno was WAY wider then that
My dad used to live in Oklahoma for 10 months and there was always tornadoes, but luckily he always survived them he said he’ll bring me to Oklahoma to see them i’m actually really excited!
Bro is a professional yapper🗣️🔥🗣️🔥🗣️🔥🗣️🔥🗣️
The el Reno tornado was 2.6 miles wide and reaching wind speeds up to 300 mph (484kph)
Average 💀
If bro gets that Tornado in his Backyard then he will know its not average 💀
A fun fact about El Reno is it was the first tornado to ever kill storm chasers
Tri State was the most deadliest destroying 3 states
Bro I haven't watched this guy since 2023 (2022)
That’s not so long ago lol
As a person who lives in ks our tornadoes get so big they look like a low hanging cloud
Fun fact about the el reno is that it's not officially classified as a ef5. It's crazy
That’s sick
Typhoon Jarrell:PSSSH THATS WEAK
Nah comparing sizes is crazy💀💀💀
Why do you sound like MC Naveed 👁👄👁
fact: the el Reno tornado only took 8 kills but it was the only tornado in history to kill 4 storm chasers (twistex crew) and another chaser
I’ve been subbed to Slogo for the past 6-7 years
I was in the elreno tornado in 2013 I was 3
The El Reno, Oklahoma, tornado was 2.6 miles wide at its peak, which is roughly 4.2 kilometers wide.
The average tornado is definitely not the size of a truck
Where to find the original video?
My mom actually experienced the 1999 Oklahoma tornado when she was younger
She had to out run it 😅
Ef2 can tear up roofs and f3 can take down walls so those are crazy but the tristate is the most deadly with 695 deaths
“Average tornado” just means what would be pictured when you hear or think ‘tornado’
Legend says if you see "dead man walking tornado" you are about to delete.
hi slogo good vid
That’s basically a hurricane on the last one
That was more of a speed rundown than a comparison
I cannot watch this video without forgetting sambuchas music
In 2020 there was an EF 3 and they said if it went on any longer it would of been an EF4 and this is only in Illinois like what and we heard the tornado drop down on the ground when we were in the basement and the ground shook and since I’m in a complex it was where we keep the bikes so the bikes shook form the hooks above and the tornado just missed our complex and went a couple blocks down and destroyed many houses it was crazy
Thr fact that almost any named ones were my home state of Oklahoma. Were genuinely just used to them here 😂.
okies when theres tornados: ☕️🗿
I’m an Oklahoman and I miss having tornadoes they were part of the culture🥲
I experienced the Joplin tornado. it was devastating. Terrifying! In fact I still live in Joplin to this day, and we are still recovering.
In southern Ontario we do get Ontario but they are usually to always small and short lived but in Barrie they get a lot bigger and longer lasting tornados but still nothing compared to what happens in the Midwest
As a Oklahoman I can confirm that our tornadoes are huge and scary
Help the fire whirl looks like a Cheeto-
Amazing slogo
I’m from Indiana but when we get storms they are usually big
So your saying that if the Joplin tornado was a mile wide that means that the vortex would be about as tall as a Supercell Thunderstorm, I don’t even want to tell you the height of one just look it up because it’s insane
Did you know the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923 in Japan created a fire tornado of over 500 meters tall causing more than 38,000 deaths in the span of 15 MINUTES.
Like holy hell that was bad.
Phineas and Ferb
, what have you done!
The Biggest Tornado Is The Solar Tornado On The Sun
I was in the Joplin tornado. I was actually injured during it and it was a nightmare
I’m so happy I live in England no tsunami no volcano no tornado no bad hurricanes we only have chavs
I am the 900th person to like 👍 this short
the fajita scale isn’t mashed in size it’s based on the amt of damage
The juplin tornado was a mile long and a mile tall or something like that
Ef-5 is deadly I know because I learned a lot of storm chaser stuff
Whose idea was it to make all the tornadoes cone tornados?
Why is nobody mentioning that absolutely insane fire whirl and its death toll omg 😱
All through the shorts I was just focusing on the circumference of the tornado the first smallest tornado was 10m and the largest was 4.6km 💀
Yo these torandoes are like 15 miles tall 💀
Do a flash flood next time
I had an ef2 hit my town but it wasn’t super bad
Dead man walking tornado: where I'm i
Isn’t large or strong enough
Starting off with the dead moon walking tornado
The jarrel F-5 type tornado known as the dreaded “dead man walking” was more worse than the ones seen.
The Oklahoma tornado is referring to the 1999 bridge creek Moore F5. The Moore F5 was way worse then jarrel, jarrel had estimates around 230 - 290mph winds, while bridge creek Moore had estimates from 300 - 320mph, these winds were recorded while it was on top of bridge creek.
@@Casual_Silverthehedgehog what about the tri-state tornado?
@@Dat_FV-4005 it was in the video💀
The fire whirl was a part of an earthquake that killed 38,000 people
Mayfield tornado be like : bruh😂
Mayfield was only an EF4
Exactly
It should have been ef5
@@Hopel3ssEditzwell, yes but no. The buildings weren’t built to withstand an EF4 let alone an EF5.
Just had an ef0 that registered 2nd all time gate to gate velocity clocking over 260+mph
Hollister Oklahoma. Rural area Thank god but spun an anti cyclonic satellite tornado with it. Had it been urban area people would have died
The ef system is not a way to judge size
The tri state tornado hit van buron and some of semo damage piedmont and some of poplar bluff
God create a man on his image.
Do other whatever you want be done with you.
Four corners of the storage winds of the earth 🌬️💨🧭🌐🌏🌎🌍 bless the Lord.
God is the alpha and Omega, and beginning and the end, who from his hand nobody can be delivery.
Pilars of the earth bless the Lord.
Pillars of the ocean and rivers bless the Lord.
🌬️💨🧭🌊🌊🌊🌐🌏🌎🌍
Who can straighten so much power like God? And without nobody is dead?
The ef2 almost hit where I live
The deadliest tornado was in BANGLADESH 🇧🇩
April 26 1997
I find thunderstorms especially tornadoes very interesting and I’ve always wanted to find out what a tornado looks like inside and in person. I love drama and I am a dangerous loving kid and my dream is to be a tornado chaser or a weather person because I’ve been interested in tornadoes and horrible thunderstorms all my life and I love investigating dangerous storms like tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes, etc. I love protecting all living things. I would risk my life for all you guys.
Average tornado: could happen any day who knows
it could kill from 7 miles away.....
No?
as a Nebraskan I can tell you EF0 ain't crap and we just experienced a EF5
The last EF5 was 11 years ago . . .
Slogo i am your fan i am your big is fan
I live in Oklahoma Yukon I heard of the el Reno tornado and Moore tornado
yor my forvroute youtuber