Quentin
Willy
QUOTE: Originally posted by WeatherGod All of this Rule G and Canadian prision nonsense has angered us at Central Weather Control......rain for everyone this weekend!...now behave or we'll make it next weekend too. [:(!]
Have fun with your trains
She who has no signature! cinscocom-tmw
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
QUOTE: Originally posted by zardoz QUOTE: Originally posted by vsmith QUOTE: Originally posted by zardoz QUOTE: Originally posted by vsmith I was watching a documentary on tornados and they pointed out an object swirling high up in the twister , they said it was a loaded railroad car and was thrown a mile from it origin, has anyone else ever heard of this happening? Rather doubtful. Blown over, yes. Maybe tumbled some distance, sure, maybe an empty boxcar with one side door open. But pickup & carried for a mile? If that's true, lunch is on me. It was a TV show so I too was doubtful, I've seen video of a semi and trailer flying thru the air with the greatest of ease in a big tornado. The only time I've ever seen a frieght car fly was during a trainwreck where a large LPG train derialed, caught fire, then exploded, all caught on video. You can clearly see when they enlarge the shot of the big blast, flying into the air, an LPG tank car rocketing away like a Polaris missle. It landed 1/2 a mile away. I also saw that video. Rather impressive!
QUOTE: Originally posted by vsmith QUOTE: Originally posted by zardoz QUOTE: Originally posted by vsmith I was watching a documentary on tornados and they pointed out an object swirling high up in the twister , they said it was a loaded railroad car and was thrown a mile from it origin, has anyone else ever heard of this happening? Rather doubtful. Blown over, yes. Maybe tumbled some distance, sure, maybe an empty boxcar with one side door open. But pickup & carried for a mile? If that's true, lunch is on me. It was a TV show so I too was doubtful, I've seen video of a semi and trailer flying thru the air with the greatest of ease in a big tornado. The only time I've ever seen a frieght car fly was during a trainwreck where a large LPG train derialed, caught fire, then exploded, all caught on video. You can clearly see when they enlarge the shot of the big blast, flying into the air, an LPG tank car rocketing away like a Polaris missle. It landed 1/2 a mile away.
QUOTE: Originally posted by zardoz QUOTE: Originally posted by vsmith I was watching a documentary on tornados and they pointed out an object swirling high up in the twister , they said it was a loaded railroad car and was thrown a mile from it origin, has anyone else ever heard of this happening? Rather doubtful. Blown over, yes. Maybe tumbled some distance, sure, maybe an empty boxcar with one side door open. But pickup & carried for a mile? If that's true, lunch is on me.
QUOTE: Originally posted by vsmith I was watching a documentary on tornados and they pointed out an object swirling high up in the twister , they said it was a loaded railroad car and was thrown a mile from it origin, has anyone else ever heard of this happening?
QUOTE: Originally posted by dharmon Well, having grown up in Texas the concept of tornados is all too familiar since the only cellars most folks have there is for storing canned stuff and hiding from twisters. Now for the seafaring sort the water spout or its latin name .... swirlus aqua aroundus is basically the same concept and equally as fun to deal with...... One night we were flying of the coast of Spain dodging thunderstorms and generally getting pretty beat up by turbulence while tracking a Soviet (yes Soviet..not Russian) submarine...(a Victor II to be exact Jim & Pops). We we young and stupid and bulletproof, so being the macho fools we were we stayed out and didn't go home like we should have.......anyway......around daybreak and appraoching the Straights of Gibraltar, our radar operator starting telling us he had a small radar contact were the sub was supposed to be.......so naturally we had him fly us in on it to grab some photos of this guy's periscope or conning tower to wrap ourselves in self induced glory .............so we drop down in altitude and come booming in ...and we're going "where is it, we don't see anything?" and the radar operator is going " it's straight ahead and only a couple of miles....I can't believe you don't see it" About then the water spout he had been tracking touched the surface and kicked up a spray of water. We just about ripped the wings off as both the senior pilot and myself both manhandled the plane to avoid it..we probably came no more than a mile from it and got thumped pretty hard......it was kind of like one of those movie scenes where the guys look out the window and scream and then look at each other and scream and then back out the window and scream some more. Fortunately our relief was already inbound so we could go home and clean up.
QUOTE: Originally posted by vsmith FYI theres a movie coming out Memorial Day called "The Day After Tommaro" about the worlds climate gone mad and it plays the above with F-5 Tornados knocking the crap out downtown LA! Oh, and New York City gets whacked by a tsunami and a glacier too.... Heres a link too view the trailer if your interested. http://www.thedayaftertomorrow.com/trailer/index.html
QUOTE: Tree68: You mentioned that trailer parks are tornado magnets, but that isn't exactly true. Just like the thing about how tornadoes never strike the downtown portions of the cities that is a kind of a myth.
QUOTE: You mentioned the Tri-state Tornado. Some scientists think that the tri-state tornado may have been a situation where one tornado would weaken and another would form in the same general area. This how the damage path lasted so long. Do you think that their was just one tornado or do you think that there were multiple tornadoes? I personally think that there was only one tornado. I don't think that anyone will ever know for sure though.
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