Hi David Carroll,
...What a devastating site to see, to see these photos, really shows the enormous power a EF4 or EF5 does have. From the people I have talked to in relation to this, I do believe its a EF5. During our chase, saw many towns affected by many other smaller EF3 Tornadoes, even these caused magnificent damage to structures....
Although I respect your point of view, the statement above if I understand it correctly seems almost contradictory. Also please tell us who you talked to about this that made you arrive at this conculsion. Further, you supply images from the media person - which of these perhaps convince you of EF-5 damage?
The EF-5 rating was derived using 3 points of damage within the town. One of these points that still remained was also used by another experienced assessor of damage and this person only sees EF-4 damage from the same assessment. For each point that makes me suggest an EF-5 damage factor, I saw other adjacent damage that makes me rethink lower.
Another thought crossed my mind: could the massive amount of debri carried with the tornado being so large have created 'impact' of incredible damage suggestive of higher damage usually associated with EF-5 when perhaps there may have been EF-4 damage/wind scale?
Getting back to the damage of power poles - most were leaning over but not snapped - even within the town. In the tornado that hit White Deer 29th May 2001, all power poles were snapped bar 1. Of course one can correctly argue the strength of the poles but really would not an EF-5 rated tornado have snapped power poles?
I guess I am not an expert but the damage simply did not add to what I had percieved to be EF-5 rating from descriptions such as those in May 3 1999 and Jarrell, Texas in 1997. What David Croan may be saying that there may have been multivorticies that could have created regions of locally EF-5 'maximum rating' (please correct me of I am wrong in my assumption David).
Regardless of the arguments in this debate, the damage is of mass scale I personally had not observed.
Regards,
Jimmy Deguara