Compared to 2021, lots of EF3+ tornadoes in the earlier months. The last minute of the 2021 video was mostly the December 10th-10th outbreak. Its always intresting to look back on the year. Heres to the 2023 severe weather season. Also, great work, Nick!
*My thoughts about some EF3+ tornadoes of 2022:* - Springdale, AR EF3: A QLCS might be happened if the tornado is weaker. There is really weak and brief velocity couplet and too small hook echo. Imagine this an EF1 and hit directly a mobile home, a life-threatening situation can occur. - Montevallo, AR EF3: This is some of the tightest CC drop and debris ball i have ever seen. If it stronger and more slow-moving, it could've been a high-end EF4. - Alford, FL EF3: A Floridan EF3, that was extremely rare. - Allendale, SC EF3: Reminds me Barnsdall, OK tornado a few days ago by looking at the hook echo. Also lots of tornadic activities happened that day, its the March 2nd, 2012 tornado outbreak all over again. - Pembroke, GA EF4: The underrated EF4 of 2022. It reminds me the infamous Tuscaloosa Tornado of 4/27 Tornado Super Outbreak by looking at the horizontal vortex. - Salado, TX EF3: The roundest hook echo i have ever seen. Perfect! - Andover, KS EF3: Bro the RFD rain bands weren't even had rains dropped, but somehow produced EF3 damages and tight signature on radar just within a stoviepipe tornado with some floating noodles. - Gaylord, MI: Like the Andover tornado, but its the straightest RFD rain bands i have ever seen. - Altamont, SD: bro forgot produced a hook echo. - Powderly, TX to Sawyer, OK EF4: It was a underrated EF4 tornado but very strong and very rare to occur in November. - Clarksville, TX to Idabel, OK EF4: It have the same thoughts i said of the Powderly to Sawyer tornado, but i love how NWS realized the situation and issued a perfect tornado emergency for Idabel while Idabel is the town that earned the weakest radar coverage that time.
I download the data from a website, and input the data into a radar application (GR2Analyst) You can find the radar data here: s3.amazonaws.com/noaa-nexrad-level2/index.html
Compared to 2021, lots of EF3+ tornadoes in the earlier months. The last minute of the 2021 video was mostly the December 10th-10th outbreak. Its always intresting to look back on the year. Heres to the 2023 severe weather season. Also, great work, Nick!
*My thoughts about some EF3+ tornadoes of 2022:*
- Springdale, AR EF3: A QLCS might be happened if the tornado is weaker. There is really weak and brief velocity couplet and too small hook echo. Imagine this an EF1 and hit directly a mobile home, a life-threatening situation can occur.
- Montevallo, AR EF3: This is some of the tightest CC drop and debris ball i have ever seen. If it stronger and more slow-moving, it could've been a high-end EF4.
- Alford, FL EF3: A Floridan EF3, that was extremely rare.
- Allendale, SC EF3: Reminds me Barnsdall, OK tornado a few days ago by looking at the hook echo. Also lots of tornadic activities happened that day, its the March 2nd, 2012 tornado outbreak all over again.
- Pembroke, GA EF4: The underrated EF4 of 2022. It reminds me the infamous Tuscaloosa Tornado of 4/27 Tornado Super Outbreak by looking at the horizontal vortex.
- Salado, TX EF3: The roundest hook echo i have ever seen. Perfect!
- Andover, KS EF3: Bro the RFD rain bands weren't even had rains dropped, but somehow produced EF3 damages and tight signature on radar just within a stoviepipe tornado with some floating noodles.
- Gaylord, MI: Like the Andover tornado, but its the straightest RFD rain bands i have ever seen.
- Altamont, SD: bro forgot produced a hook echo.
- Powderly, TX to Sawyer, OK EF4: It was a underrated EF4 tornado but very strong and very rare to occur in November.
- Clarksville, TX to Idabel, OK EF4: It have the same thoughts i said of the Powderly to Sawyer tornado, but i love how NWS realized the situation and issued a perfect tornado emergency for Idabel while Idabel is the town that earned the weakest radar coverage that time.
You should do a 2023 version of this video!
nice video nick, tbh there was less than i thought
I remember every one! 2023 has already been crazy wonder what the spring will bring
Amazing videos as always. Btw, where do you find the radar pics of these tornados?
I download the data from a website, and input the data into a radar application (GR2Analyst)
You can find the radar data here: s3.amazonaws.com/noaa-nexrad-level2/index.html
Amazing video but would have been great to at least add a frame or two about the ones outside the US (at least the ones under radar coverage)
Do 2023