all these high school drop outs need to stop trying to act smart on youtube.just because you can write a paragraph doesnt make you look any smarter you stupid fuck
Well, I guess since I've been responding to some people's questions in paragraphs, your comment is aimed at me. First off, I'm no high school dropout, just a guy booted out of his frosh year at college for being a wee bit wild. BUT...I HAVE educated myself about tornadoes by being a hard-core tornado chaser for over 20 years. I fly to the midwest every May for a month and chase with one of the premier chase teams in the country. I've written only to help clarify things. How 'bout you, buddy?
And btw....this vid is of a dust devil...period. There are no thunderclouds in the sky (at least that we can see), which a tornado NEEDS to be born in and descend from. This is one big d-devil, for sure. If drive a Ford 1-ton truck with 4 rear tires. It's heavy..and stable. This dust devil would likely kick my truck from one lane to the next. It would be dangerous. Those old VW camper vans?? This thing would blow it clean over. I'm from Az., and have driven thru a hundred of 'em.
HM3JOHNSGIRL: With total and complete respect to your Mom.....she is incorrect about that. What she MAY be remembering, is that often prior to tornadoes blue skies. Often all afternoon. BUT...after the sun beats down on all that humidity, huge storms can blossom in upwards of only 20 mins, sometimes. I have seen that myself. But guaranteed...the F-4 DID come from a thunderstorm. Perhaps there were no lightning bolts at the time, but the funnel was born in a T-Storm, and snaked it's way down.
I used to live in cali.....it's a dust devil. Tornadoes need a super cell to form and that is usually a huge thunderstorms although some can develop out of a blue sky. I've seen it happen, so has my mother in the 1974 super outbreak in Indiana.
NO NO NO, tornadoes absolutely, positively, cannot form from a blue sky. A true tornado ALWAYS is connected to a convective cloud....generally...and I DO mean generally....a strong thunderstorm or a supercell. Dust Devils need not a cloud in the sky to form. I live in So. Arizona. In the spring, you can sometimes see 10 strong ones at once out in the cotton fields and scrubs between Tucson and Phoenix. All the are is heat at the ground rising upwards in a spinning fashion. Trust me on this.
That's not true, on April 3rd, 1974 my mother lived in Monticello Indiana and a tornado wiped out basically the whole town. There were a few clouds in the sky but not a thunderstorm. It wasn't raining and it wasn't doing anything but windy. My mother tells me that one every year.
She must not remember it correctly then. naderchaser is right, although skies may have been clear for most of the day, there most definitely was a thunderstorm overhead when the tornado struck.
btw a supercell is by definition a type of thunderstorm.
It's just a dust devil, sand tornadoes that are unrelated to thunderstorms. The worst it could do is get your mouth full of sand. The strong ones (which are extremely rare and are as powerful as an F1 tornado) could possibly damage a roof and lift it slightly, but that's all.
dumb
doriachris 3 months ago
calm evevator music in the backround ftw :D
kjulehh 9 months ago
all these high school drop outs need to stop trying to act smart on youtube.just because you can write a paragraph doesnt make you look any smarter you stupid fuck
azdrifter520 2 years ago
Where in Az. are you from?
naderchaser 2 years ago
Well, I guess since I've been responding to some people's questions in paragraphs, your comment is aimed at me. First off, I'm no high school dropout, just a guy booted out of his frosh year at college for being a wee bit wild. BUT...I HAVE educated myself about tornadoes by being a hard-core tornado chaser for over 20 years. I fly to the midwest every May for a month and chase with one of the premier chase teams in the country. I've written only to help clarify things. How 'bout you, buddy?
naderchaser 2 years ago
And btw....this vid is of a dust devil...period. There are no thunderclouds in the sky (at least that we can see), which a tornado NEEDS to be born in and descend from. This is one big d-devil, for sure. If drive a Ford 1-ton truck with 4 rear tires. It's heavy..and stable. This dust devil would likely kick my truck from one lane to the next. It would be dangerous. Those old VW camper vans?? This thing would blow it clean over. I'm from Az., and have driven thru a hundred of 'em.
naderchaser 2 years ago
HM3JOHNSGIRL: With total and complete respect to your Mom.....she is incorrect about that. What she MAY be remembering, is that often prior to tornadoes blue skies. Often all afternoon. BUT...after the sun beats down on all that humidity, huge storms can blossom in upwards of only 20 mins, sometimes. I have seen that myself. But guaranteed...the F-4 DID come from a thunderstorm. Perhaps there were no lightning bolts at the time, but the funnel was born in a T-Storm, and snaked it's way down.
naderchaser 2 years ago
I used to live in cali.....it's a dust devil. Tornadoes need a super cell to form and that is usually a huge thunderstorms although some can develop out of a blue sky. I've seen it happen, so has my mother in the 1974 super outbreak in Indiana.
HM3Johnsgirl 2 years ago
NO NO NO, tornadoes absolutely, positively, cannot form from a blue sky. A true tornado ALWAYS is connected to a convective cloud....generally...and I DO mean generally....a strong thunderstorm or a supercell. Dust Devils need not a cloud in the sky to form. I live in So. Arizona. In the spring, you can sometimes see 10 strong ones at once out in the cotton fields and scrubs between Tucson and Phoenix. All the are is heat at the ground rising upwards in a spinning fashion. Trust me on this.
naderchaser 2 years ago
That's not true, on April 3rd, 1974 my mother lived in Monticello Indiana and a tornado wiped out basically the whole town. There were a few clouds in the sky but not a thunderstorm. It wasn't raining and it wasn't doing anything but windy. My mother tells me that one every year.
HM3Johnsgirl 2 years ago
She must not remember it correctly then. naderchaser is right, although skies may have been clear for most of the day, there most definitely was a thunderstorm overhead when the tornado struck.
btw a supercell is by definition a type of thunderstorm.
dragonridley 2 years ago
in the middle of an oil feild
KWEKOSHKUKI12 2 years ago
I wonder how much destructive force one of those has, I can't imagine it's that much, but this one does seem quite big!
Lisztianpiano 2 years ago
Really, tornadoes need thundestorms to form. I thought everbody knew that.
dragonridley 2 years ago
medum size dust devil
Eddayson 3 years ago
its a dust devil
dragonfreakE 4 years ago
You can't even call these "tornados." The are dust devils.
that's it.
Jazepentz 4 years ago
read the fucking title
ryanr121 2 years ago
were wer u at
goku180000 4 years ago
on the grape vine.
lopaka73 4 years ago
oh i always pass thru der but i never saw 1
goku180000 4 years ago
wow... i didnt think a tornado would be over. cuz ive drove over here alot.
cwschad1 4 years ago
It's just a dust devil, sand tornadoes that are unrelated to thunderstorms. The worst it could do is get your mouth full of sand. The strong ones (which are extremely rare and are as powerful as an F1 tornado) could possibly damage a roof and lift it slightly, but that's all.
Xalmr 4 years ago
dust devil, extremely weak tornado that picks up dust, usually occurs in deserts
lalotrejo 4 years ago
A dust devil is in no sense a tornado
dragonridley 2 years ago
That is a dust devil!
hurricaneheardy111 4 years ago
Small Dust Devil
ufodata123 4 years ago
It's a dust devil.
mboltonjr 4 years ago