Your statement about wind speed is wrong. The highest wind speed ever recorded on earth was over 300MPH in Moore, Oklahoma, during an EF5 tornado. On May 3, 1999.
Thanks for the comment kenny. We reported the highest wind speed based on the World Meteorological Association records, and they seem to have a fairly strict validation process for data reporting. You are right that tornados are though to be faster than cyclones, but they tend to destroy measurement equipment so many theoretical calculations and data of tornado speed end up unverified. Cheers,
'highest wind speed ever recorded on earth'? I'm willing to bet there are higher speeds that have been recorded in laboratory conditions on earth'.... But I'm not going to waste my time Googling it, unless somebody's willing to place a substantial amount of money on it? Thank God for us pointlessly pedantic individuals ;)
@nc3826 yeah but most construction's still done in imperial so you have to use both in US and Canada. A lot of people still think in imperial in north america everyone gives their weight and height in pounds and feet-inches for example. Not saying it's logical just the way it is.
For the millionth time... just Google what the USA standard... For weights and measures is...... And it's not the imperial standard....Which you continue to incorrectly assume it is....
Your statement about wind speed is wrong. The highest wind speed ever recorded on earth was over 300MPH in Moore, Oklahoma, during an EF5 tornado. On May 3, 1999.
The record excludes exceptional weather events like tornados. Otherwise the top 10 highest wind speeds would all be tornadoes.
Thanks for the comment kenny. We reported the highest wind speed based on the World Meteorological Association records, and they seem to have a fairly strict validation process for data reporting. You are right that tornados are though to be faster than cyclones, but they tend to destroy measurement equipment so many theoretical calculations and data of tornado speed end up unverified.
Cheers,
correct! thanks! @@m.streicher8286
'highest wind speed ever recorded on earth'? I'm willing to bet there are higher speeds that have been recorded in laboratory conditions on earth'....
But I'm not going to waste my time Googling it, unless somebody's willing to place a substantial amount of money on it?
Thank God for us pointlessly pedantic individuals ;)
Thanks for the imperial to metric conversion👍
400 km/hr is insane.
It's incorrect to reference the Imperial standard..... Since it's not used in the USA....
and good luck learning how to do conversions.....
@nc3826 yeah but most construction's still done in imperial so you have to use both in US and Canada. A lot of people still think in imperial in north america everyone gives their weight and height in pounds and feet-inches for example. Not saying it's logical just the way it is.
For the millionth time... just Google what the USA standard... For weights and measures is...... And it's not the imperial standard....Which you continue to incorrectly assume it is....
Awesome video as always. Thanks for the work you put into these.
thanks for the comment! We certainly do spend a ton of time researching and animating
Awesome video! I didn't know wind had so much power🤯
Google wind turbines
@@nc3826 what's a wind turbine 😵
Excellent video!
Thank you very much!
Heavy timber frame construction. Boom. Just solved it.
only $1 million for solving that?
👎Thumbs down for calling “exponential” a quadratic relation. I stopped watching at this point.