Tornadoes - EVERYTHING You Need to Know

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  • čas přidán 28. 05. 2024
  • Tornadoes - Thanks DeleteMe for sponsoring this video! Protect your online Info Today! joindeleteme.com/TwoBitDavinci
    We're about to see some record breaking tornadoes, not just in frequency, but also severity. And some of the reasons, are compounding events like we've covered in previous videos. But how can we predict tornadoes so well months in advance, when we can't even predict rain properly most of the time? And what exactly can we expect this year? Let's figure this out!
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    Chapters
    0:00 - Introduction
    1:00 - How Tornadoes Work
    2:00 - Tornado Alley
    3:00 - Why?
    6:00 - How Radar Helps
    what we'll cover
    two bit da vinci,tornadoes,storm chasers,tornadoes 2024,how bad are tornadoes,tornado season,tornado season 2024,tornadoes today,tornadoes in florida,tornadoes in 2024,Recording Breaking Tornadoes are Coming - Here's Why,storm chasing tornado,el nino,servere weather,weather,weather 2024,RECORD Tornado Season Is COMING - What You NEED to Know,How Storm-chasers Predict Tornadoes SO Accurately,Why Tornadoes This Year Will Be the WORST In History, Why Tornadoes This Year - WORST In History!, Tornadoes - EVERYTHING You Need to Know
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 244

  • @TwoBitDaVinci
    @TwoBitDaVinci  Před 17 dny +1

    Thanks DeleteMe for sponsoring this video! Protect your online Info Today! joindeleteme.com/TwoBitDavinci

    • @t98765af
      @t98765af Před 15 dny

      Where are the resource links for learning more about interpretting the radar imagery?

  • @STEAMerBear
    @STEAMerBear Před 17 dny +49

    Do you mean hurricane? Tornado? Or both?

    • @TwoBitDaVinci
      @TwoBitDaVinci  Před 17 dny +21

      Apologies just tornadoes!

    • @youtubenoob9584
      @youtubenoob9584 Před 17 dny +5

      I dont know for sure but I'm pretty sure both, Colorodo state said it would be an above average hurricane season because of la nina. Please update me if needed! Lol

    • @captaincarl8230
      @captaincarl8230 Před 17 dny +2

      @@youtubenoob9584 You are correct. The weather cycle always brings in an above average number of hurricanes. Any storm activity on the sun will affect our weather, just like in 2023.

    • @STEAMerBear
      @STEAMerBear Před 17 dny +2

      @@youtubenoob9584 I tend to trust them (perhaps more than any other source). I used to be in the CSU EE department (back then we were in same building as climate science). Lots of great folks-and VERY solid scientists. I had a number of mathematically rigorous “conversations” with climatologists at CSU. I’d been a science teacher and they truly schooled me about all the nonsensical/crap “climate science” propagating out there. (Bottom line: If a climate-related source doesn’t hold a Ph.D. in climatology, you should definitely doubt them!)

    • @rl8073
      @rl8073 Před 17 dny

      He means hes a clueless idiot who calls himself an "influencer and a content creator".

  • @warpdriveby
    @warpdriveby Před 16 dny +2

    I'd definitely watch the supercomputer simulations done by Leigh Orf of UW. The bottle analogy looks like a typical stovepipe tornado, but what he appears to have found is that in supercell spawned tornados the inflow that is squeezed into the "notch" will line up and form a parade of small vertical vortices that train into the visible tornado. It's the aggregate of rotational momentum from these sub columns that create the most violent tornadoes in his models. I should just leave it there and say look up Leigh Orf.

  • @maggiekelley259
    @maggiekelley259 Před 17 dny +8

    Tornadoes are also acting *really friggen weird.* Drunknado is now a term after a tornado did a full circle down in Texas.

    • @ipp_tutor
      @ipp_tutor Před 15 dny +1

      That's crazy. Didn't know that.

    • @EdT.-xt6yv
      @EdT.-xt6yv Před 15 dny +1

      According to legends from the elders, certain areas should be avoided at certain time of the year but h-sapiens keep getting on the path of these natural phenomena?

  • @nathan43082
    @nathan43082 Před 17 dny +12

    Oh dear. That challenge out to flat Earthers will be met with a bit of non-science lunacy.

  • @dupetrooper
    @dupetrooper Před 17 dny +13

    So far this year, we've seen 82 significant tornadoes yet only 15 fatalities, i.e. only 18.2 percent of significant tornadoes result in fatalities, compare this to 81.1% in 2021, 50.9% in 2013, and over 240% in 2011 (2.4 fatalities on average per significant tornadoes). forecasting technology and methodology has never been more precise, and the means to communicate warnings have never been so widespread - although tornadoes are getting more common, they're getting less dangerous on account of warnings and better shelters. PLEASE keep the NWS as the life-saving public service it is! Some politicians want NOAA to be dismantled due to its research into climate change, however these events are only going to get more and more dangerous if our existing methodology is uprooted over such a small disagreement.

    • @TwoBitDaVinci
      @TwoBitDaVinci  Před 17 dny

      well said!

    • @Cleanse_
      @Cleanse_ Před 17 dny

      i wil l say for 2011, that was the craziest tornado year. The super outbreak, the joplin tornado, and many other huge tornado outbreaks. But still, the NWS is doing great.

    • @PM-vv3uc
      @PM-vv3uc Před 15 dny +1

      And the rise of live streams of storm chasers and weather enthusiasts, f.e. Ryan Hall Y'all

    • @mkmac9539
      @mkmac9539 Před 11 dny

      I agree with your point that better communication reduces fatalities. However, be careful with the math. Your 18% calc assumes an even distribution. If 15 people die in 1 of the 82 tornadoes, then you would say 1.2% of significant tornadoes resulted in fatalities.

    • @dupetrooper
      @dupetrooper Před 11 dny +1

      @@mkmac9539 % make monkey brain pay attention sorry macaroni michael

  • @Shadow-hw3kn
    @Shadow-hw3kn Před 17 dny +7

    At 0:02 you said hurricane instead of tornado

    • @Spagine
      @Spagine Před 17 dny

      I think that he meant to say that.

    • @tomholroyd7519
      @tomholroyd7519 Před 17 dny

      @@Spagine It might be quite true that this year's hurricane season will be more extreme than average. Possibly much more extreme. There is in fact a causal link between hurricanes and tornadoes. H can cause T. Not really in Oklahoma

  • @samuxan
    @samuxan Před 17 dny +15

    it would have been interesting to go into why tornadoes need flat lands and don't really form on slopes or mountains, specifically because the wind shear mountains create. wind farms can have the same effect so I have to wonder if big wind farms can make the conditions for tornadoes less likely

    • @galvanaut7119
      @galvanaut7119 Před 17 dny +4

      They do take energy out of the wind and that energy makes tornadoes so yes, they probably would make them less likely/powerful. The question would be: how much less.

    • @TheMrCougarful
      @TheMrCougarful Před 17 dny +3

      No.

    • @nnonotnow
      @nnonotnow Před 17 dny +3

      No.

    • @rnbsteenstar
      @rnbsteenstar Před 17 dny +6

      Nope, tornadoes will form wherever they feel like it when conditions are correct.

    • @ioneeamigo8357
      @ioneeamigo8357 Před 17 dny

      Sounds kind of right

  • @AllThingsConsidered333
    @AllThingsConsidered333 Před 17 dny +3

    This is great thanks :) I especially appreciate the explanation of the radar terms ❤

  • @ipp_tutor
    @ipp_tutor Před 15 dny +1

    Loved the simplicity and down-to-earth explanation! Awesome video!

  • @letiziasparks2902
    @letiziasparks2902 Před 13 dny +2

    Thank you for the informative video as always. I wish Two Bit da Vinci team a great May and lots of happiness and health!

    • @TwoBitDaVinci
      @TwoBitDaVinci  Před 13 dny

      you're amazing thank you for the kind words! we're doing well, and I hope you're having a great May so far!

    • @Israel_Two_Bit
      @Israel_Two_Bit Před 11 dny

      Thank you. That's an awesome positive vibe!

  • @StuTheDon17
    @StuTheDon17 Před 17 dny +7

    For what it's worth, I've had a tornado miss my house by less than 100 metres. It did some damage, but nothing like you get in the US.
    I live in the south west of Western Australia.

    • @TwoBitDaVinci
      @TwoBitDaVinci  Před 17 dny

      wow really? is it a common occurrence?

    • @StuTheDon17
      @StuTheDon17 Před 17 dny

      @@TwoBitDaVinci
      I suppose so. We get one hit our area every 5 years or so.
      The last one was only 2 days ago.

  • @Beboobopbibbybop
    @Beboobopbibbybop Před 17 dny +4

    Michigan is frequentley seeing tornados now and it use to be something we never worried about infact we worry more about how long winter will last then if theres ever going to be a tornado last year one right near my area in dearborn 20 minutes away from detroit and now we are seeing even more this year stay safe everyone🙏

    • @ClownPilled88
      @ClownPilled88 Před 17 dny

      Tornadoes are happing during winter now. Primarily in the US. I believe the military weather weapon conspiracists are right unfortunately. Only in the US? This shit is unnatural.

    • @EssoxVanOstenberg
      @EssoxVanOstenberg Před 17 dny +2

      I Live In Michigan But I Honestly Enjoy Tornados.

    • @mercifulbull5813
      @mercifulbull5813 Před 17 dny +3

      That's because parts of Michigan lie in what's part of "Hoosier Alley". Which spans from illinois to ohio and from kentucky through Michigan. This Tornado season has seen an extremely above average season for the Plains and midwest and has been relatively quiet for the deep south. (Dixie Alley)

    • @texasstardust6010
      @texasstardust6010 Před 17 dny

      ...Add to the Equation...GEOENGINEERING...and States that did not have to be concerned about Tornadoes...now they will. It's by Design..call your Reps, let them know you are TIRED of Weather Manipulation.

    • @Beboobopbibbybop
      @Beboobopbibbybop Před 17 dny

      @@EssoxVanOstenberg I use to wana be a tornado chaser but tbh when it happens in a city where we usually only worry abt thunderstorms and to much snow it’s not something you can prepare for or appreciate 🤷‍♂️

  • @user-ud3ms2co4q
    @user-ud3ms2co4q Před 16 dny +1

    Hello, this video was really good and good information thanks so much for all the information about the tornadoes

  • @chasepirtle8662
    @chasepirtle8662 Před 17 dny +2

    Great video!

    • @rl8073
      @rl8073 Před 17 dny

      If you're an idiot maybe.

  • @ZirothTech
    @ZirothTech Před 15 dny +2

    Loved the tornado demonstration Ricky 😀

  • @suggesttwo
    @suggesttwo Před 5 hodinami

    1:30 Airspeeds are higher as you get closer to the equator. That's what gives the air a little spin. 1:35

  • @mkmac9539
    @mkmac9539 Před 16 dny +1

    Thanks, Ricky. Good video.

  • @VideoconferencingUSA
    @VideoconferencingUSA Před 17 dny +2

    Nice job

  • @matthewbarry4464
    @matthewbarry4464 Před 17 dny +9

    FYI, your graphics at 2:38 are backwards. The desert plains and the Gulf of Mexico effects don't match the narrative.

    • @tomholroyd7519
      @tomholroyd7519 Před 17 dny

      yeah that's not where GoM is, don't cut off the map eh?

  • @steventaylor4159
    @steventaylor4159 Před 17 dny +15

    We need to make those concrete 3D printed homes a standard in tornado alley that would help.

    • @InimitaPaul
      @InimitaPaul Před 17 dny +6

      It’s baffling that building with wood is even allowed in tornado alley! If I were an insurer I’d laugh every time someone tried to insure their home there.

    • @steventaylor4159
      @steventaylor4159 Před 17 dny +1

      @@InimitaPaul Yeah exactly hey I know every year there are guaranteed tornadoes let's allow trailer parks.

    • @madcow3417
      @madcow3417 Před 17 dny +1

      I know that ABS prints are about 1/3 as strong as cast ABS. I'm guessing 3d printed concrete is even weaker than 1/3 because the material has to be slightly different. Maybe all houses must have concrete basements or a tornado shelter?

    • @steventaylor4159
      @steventaylor4159 Před 17 dny

      @@madcow3417 yeah and block exterior walls with metal bolted truss roof framing.

    • @ClownPilled88
      @ClownPilled88 Před 17 dny +3

      We need to move underground. There too many fkn tornadoes.

  • @johnsonrepp
    @johnsonrepp Před 17 dny +5

    I keep saying, each year is a record breaking year for weather events. Each year is worse than the one before. Just think, how many “record setting” moments have happened in the last 10 years…?

    • @TheMrCougarful
      @TheMrCougarful Před 17 dny +2

      That's right. Guess what, that trend doesn't end in anything under 100 years.

    • @RScottMelton
      @RScottMelton Před 17 dny +2

      I don't understand the misstatements in this video considering that NOAA's graph shows a significant decline in strong (F3+) since 1970. Likewise, when normalized, all tornado damage is trending down since 1950. By every metric, climate related disasters & deaths (flooding, drought, forest fires, etc.) are very much on the decline over the last 100 years (EM-DAT). Not that there can't be outlier years which can be cherry picked, but overall, this video seems like climate crisis fear mongering.

    • @slayer18726
      @slayer18726 Před 17 dny

      ​@@RScottMeltonbecause people dont research for themselves. They heard it on the news so it must be true.

    • @lonnywilcox445
      @lonnywilcox445 Před 15 dny

      @@RScottMelton yes, the NWS is pretty deceptive about their tornado numbers going back in history. While the number of tornadoes appears to be going up since the 1970's, a lot of that is an artifact of expanding weather radar use. These days the NWS will send out teams to inspect the area of any radar indicated tornado activity, not just the ones that hit a human habitation and cause damage. This can be confirmed by looking at the confirmed tornado tracks each year and making note of the number of tracks which begin and end in uninhabited areas and did no damage beyond crop damage. Crop damage is important but the insurers don't really care if the damage was caused by a tornado or straight line winds. But every confirmed tornado does matter to the NWS even if there was zero damage. That is why we see a huge number of tornado tracks which cover less than a mile and less than 50 feet wide. The number isn't changing in the big picture, and may actually be decreasing, as 20 years ago the NWS simply didn't go looking for tornados that weren't sighted by someone or did no damage to property.

  • @Right-Handed_Neutrino
    @Right-Handed_Neutrino Před 16 dny +1

    Actually, here in Oklahoma, we just broke that 62 tornado in a day record, last week. Most weren't violent tornadoes, but there were a few that were. It was a busy day! I use to be an amateur storm chaser. Got into it after the movie Twister. But now there are just too many "amateur "storm chasers, it's making it dangerous for the professionals, so that's why I no longer do it. Those were the good ole days. Oh and with most "sisters" or "twins" tornadoes, one will be rotating normally, counter-clockwise and the sister tornado will be anti-cyclonic, spinning clockwise

    • @Israel_Two_Bit
      @Israel_Two_Bit Před 11 dny

      I'll bet there'll be more amateur storm chasers after the remake Twisters comes out!!

  • @kandismueller7716
    @kandismueller7716 Před 15 dny

    The weather has been getting increasingly worse. I noticed it in March of 2013 when there was a tornado on the ground in Macon County, IL, and heading our way, what seemed about half the days in that month. We moved away from the Mid West (to Arizona) primarily because I was afraid of tornadoes. When a tornado lifted a 6 inch slab of concrete off an underground shelter I realized that nothing but a monolithically poured dome is actually safe from a tornado, I began my campaign to convince my partner to move out west. It would be interesting (and vital to some) if you could do a show on what actually is a really safe tornado shelter.

    • @lonnywilcox445
      @lonnywilcox445 Před 15 dny

      Reality is the weather is subject to perception bias. I live in the same area you did live in and I kind of miss the almost daily thunderstorms from the past. When I started in the fire service getting called out for severe weather was a common thing, but the number of call outs for weather have dropped off significantly over the years.

  • @donfields1234
    @donfields1234 Před 17 dny +1

    If you REALLY want to learn about tornados, particularly if you or friends/family live in tornado alley.... or these days pretty much anywhere on earth. I highly suggest watching and at least subscribing to Ryan Hall Ya'll. His crew is by far the best tornado, and general severe weather channel to watch hands down. You will have to see it to believe it and after you see them, if you are a westher nerd, or are in severe westher prone area and you see Ryans channel broadcating/streaming you will want to watch. Only one way to find and know the best and that is to actually experience their presentstion.

  • @DavidHalko
    @DavidHalko Před 12 dny

    Hurricane season is different that Tornadoes

  • @ericschout8058
    @ericschout8058 Před 17 dny +1

    For a country with this much tornados it is strange that after every tornado people rebuild their houses again with plywood and plaster. Why? There has to be a learning effect. In western Europe we build with bricks

    • @TheRealInky
      @TheRealInky Před 17 dny +1

      Tornadoes don't care about bricks, at least not the tornadoes that you need to seriously worry about. The strongest tornadoes reduce homes of any kind to their slabs... They also have ripped chunks of paved roads out. That's how powerful they are.

    • @lacylaizure6540
      @lacylaizure6540 Před 16 dny +2

      Probably due to cost/benefit analyst due to probability.
      I live in Oklahoma and own (2) stick framed homes, both over 100yrs old. The monsters that hit Moore, OK or Joplin, MO are pretty rare. To rebuild and replace homes with all concrete oe CMU construction is probably substantially more expensive for the rare chance a tornado is going to hit you.

    • @lacylaizure6540
      @lacylaizure6540 Před 16 dny +1

      Probably due to cost/benefit analyst and to probability.
      I live in Oklahoma and own (2) stick framed homes, both over 100yrs old. The monsters that hit Moore, OK and Joplin, MO are pretty rare. To rebuild and replace homes with all concrete or CMU construction is probably substantially more expensive for the rare chance a tornado is going to hit you.

    • @Israel_Two_Bit
      @Israel_Two_Bit Před 11 dny

      @@lacylaizure6540 That was my thought exactly. I wonder how many people have been hit multiple times by a house-crumbling tornado and have had to rebuild. We have a saying here in my country: "no one learns in another man's shoes" The learning curve would make sense if it happened repeatedly to the same people, but I'm guessing that's not really the case here. Of course,I could be wrong

    • @lacylaizure6540
      @lacylaizure6540 Před 11 dny

      @@Israel_Two_Bit actually, Moore, OK could speak to that, as it was hit by 4 tornadoes in 14 years. Rather than building concrete homes though, people simply quit trying to build back in that location. It was a bit of an anomaly, as it is the only place I know of that acted as a magnet like that. Most of the time we just get smaller ones that spin up in rural areas.
      Now that I say all this, we will probably get a monster that destroys tulsa this year. I think the Simpsons did predict some bad tornadoes for Oklahoma this year. 😅

  • @urbanstrencan
    @urbanstrencan Před 15 dny

    Last year I saw first smaller tornado here in Europe Slovenia, weather is getting strange

    • @Israel_Two_Bit
      @Israel_Two_Bit Před 11 dny

      Wow, that must have been a pretty weird site to see!

  • @bxndsalot
    @bxndsalot Před 16 dny

    man pray for us in kzoo & portage we sure got hit bad & we in michigan

  • @SuperTinaFaye
    @SuperTinaFaye Před 17 dny

    it started 2 months ago when we got hit with an F3 in Indiana.. What you need to be warning about is the hurricane season coming up.. It's gonna be bad

  • @Soothsayer210
    @Soothsayer210 Před 17 dny +1

    Thx. for the video. Now that the El Nino has been confirmed to have transitioned to La Lina, can you do a video on the affects of this on a Global Level please?

    • @ipp_tutor
      @ipp_tutor Před 15 dny +1

      Great idea!!

    • @Israel_Two_Bit
      @Israel_Two_Bit Před 11 dny

      Definitely a good idea. We'll look into it for sure. Thanks!

  • @MichaelM-uw3mk
    @MichaelM-uw3mk Před 4 dny +1

    4:14 You mispoke. You meant to say Missouri (as in the Joplin, MO tornado of 2011) but you said Montana. You also mispoke at the beginning when you said hurricane season. Your graphic of air coming out of the gulf is also geographically wrong.

  • @mikeb2611
    @mikeb2611 Před 17 dny

    yes they were for sure right

  • @The_Joshuan_Empire
    @The_Joshuan_Empire Před 16 dny

    4:25 note: the 62 tornadoes in one day is true; for the highest in a single day, thatd be either apirl 3rd 1973, the "super outbreak" or the march 31st outbreak of 2023, 90~ and 93 each in one day. severity wise, 2011 by far.

  • @xyzyyz
    @xyzyyz Před 17 dny +9

    I’m guessing you have not been monitoring the weather in the last few months. Tornado season started a long time ago.

    • @praetoriangward8507
      @praetoriangward8507 Před 17 dny +4

      This video is fraught with errors. It was Alabama and Missouri not Montana . El Niño is not why this is happening it's the La Niña effect which will also increase tropical cyclone activity.

    • @tomholroyd7519
      @tomholroyd7519 Před 17 dny

      He started out by saying hurricane season, it's even in the closed captions. The weather is confusing

  • @Samuel-H
    @Samuel-H Před 17 dny +1

    Kinda late for “it’s coming” when we’ve been in it for awhile and have had some bad nights with tornado outbreaks already

    • @greysonward224
      @greysonward224 Před 17 dny

      Yeah that's what I was thinking because tornado season ends in less than a month so I thought he was talking about next year but nope he's talking about this year

  • @NGC-catseye
    @NGC-catseye Před 16 dny +2

    So, what caused the reverse spin tornado 🌪 ❔

    • @Israel_Two_Bit
      @Israel_Two_Bit Před 11 dny +1

      Good question.

    • @i_am_a_toast_of_french
      @i_am_a_toast_of_french Před dnem +1

      because when an updraft lifts a horizontal axis of rotating air, it normally forms 2 columns of air rotating in opposite directions and the anticyclonic one usually dies off but occasionally survives

  • @oliviahodges5161
    @oliviahodges5161 Před 17 dny

    3 Then said he unto me, This 🌪️ is the curse that goeth forth over the face of the whole earth: for every one that stealeth shall be cut off as on this side according to it; and every one that sweareth shall be cut off as on that side according to it.

  • @snake10566
    @snake10566 Před 17 dny

    Let'sssss gooo!!!!

  • @oliviahodges5161
    @oliviahodges5161 Před 17 dny

    2 And he said unto me, What seest thou? And I answered, I see a flying 🌪️ roll; the length thereof is twenty cubits, and the breadth thereof ten cubits.

  • @DeathsGarden-oz9gg
    @DeathsGarden-oz9gg Před 17 dny +2

    Why don't we rebuild out of rock or brick in tornado alley as timber obviously isn't strong enough.
    Hell we can use the waste rock from some mines just melt it into blocks and tada building materials for homes and as it rusts it gets colored naturally 🎉.

    • @Poppetje75
      @Poppetje75 Před 14 dny

      Living in the Netherlands in a brick house, I never understood this. There are brick houses in the U.S. but I still see many houses being built and rebuilt from just wood. And then they complain about the billions in damage tornadoes cause every year.

  • @oliviahodges5161
    @oliviahodges5161 Před 17 dny

    THEN I turned, and lifted up mine eyes, and looked, and behold a flying 🌪️ roll.

  • @olcountry8432
    @olcountry8432 Před 17 dny +1

    Had one at my place in north Louisiana last week. Fella up the street got a tree through his house. Sucks.

  • @dreuxlescell3184
    @dreuxlescell3184 Před 17 dny

    Think DIRECTED ENERGY like a turbo on a race car!

  • @FalloutFeller
    @FalloutFeller Před 17 dny

    I was confused when the video started with "predicting one of the worst hurricane seasons" and then you talked about tornadoes.

    • @freedomoffgrid
      @freedomoffgrid Před 17 dny

      hurricanes are very large tornadoes. 😛

    • @FalloutFeller
      @FalloutFeller Před 17 dny

      @@freedomoffgrid Not really. They are formed different, effect different areas, and the storms that produce them are very different.

  • @MrBadassc8
    @MrBadassc8 Před 17 dny

    Great news!

  • @n.npixel2937
    @n.npixel2937 Před 17 dny

    im honstly surprised how much weaker these tornados are becoming like most are not even that dangerouis yes they are still deadly but i think the wind shear is making this more rare for ef4's and ef5's

  • @swere1240
    @swere1240 Před 16 dny

    i dont think the 2011 super outbreak had tornados in montana lol i believe it was Mississippi. dont quote me on that though lol. also derechos can also be very destructive as well. here in iowa where i live the 2020 derecho caused the most damage overall by any storm. you could see its path from satalite images and its took a swipe through the state several hundred square miles across. i heard it damage a 3rd of iowas tree canopy. also not alot of people knew what was coming either and it was moving so fast it caught alot of people off guard

  • @ArcticYT1945
    @ArcticYT1945 Před 17 dny +1

    Record hurricanes tornados and solar flares

  • @gingerfreak01
    @gingerfreak01 Před 17 dny

    A couple of points.
    At the off you say scientists are predicting one of the worst hurricane seasons of all time. It's true the upcoming hurricane season is predicted to have above average storms, but this is nothing to do with tornadoes. Hurricanes and tornadoes are completely different things.
    The spring tornado season was also predicted to be potentially more active than usual, but neither has been predicted as 'one of the worst of all time'.
    At 7:58 you imply this velocity couplet indicates a tornado - it does not. It shows divergence, where the back half of the air is moving away and the front half toward. This can be indicative of a downburst. A tornado velocity couplet has (for typical anti-clockwise rotation) the left half green and the right half red.
    And while rare, anticyclonic (clockwise) tornadoes happen every year, most often as satellite tornadoes to very strong tornadoes. You can see this in your bath. If you spin the water round fast enough and dip your finger somewhere close you can get an eddy spinning the other way round. I don't know of a true twin (from separate conjoining storms) where one was cyclonic (anti-clockwise) and one anticyclonic (clockwise). I'd be more than happy to be proved wrong on this though.
    Enjoyed the video despite my points here!

    • @TwoBitDaVinci
      @TwoBitDaVinci  Před 17 dny +1

      I'm sorry I misspoke, I meant to say worst tornado, nothing to do with hurricanes ... apologies!

    • @gingerfreak01
      @gingerfreak01 Před 17 dny

      @@TwoBitDaVinci That's ok, you can fix it in post :p
      I realize I've been picky with my points, but a well-followed informative source has to be accurate, because viewers trust everything that the source is saying, and inaccuracies can have serious consequences.
      'Worst of all time', well that's channel promotion, I don't have a problem with that, but I'd love to see you do a vid on weather forecasts and how anything other than the next few days are based on historic weather records, and how a forecast is a statistical evaluation, with no absolutes (and a lot of hedging).
      Thanks for replying, everyone's so busy right now!

  • @msheart2
    @msheart2 Před 16 dny

    Weather modification cover that.

  • @jean-clauderainville677

    The blue waves showing the doppler effect are reversed. They should be compressed in the direction of movement...

    • @TwoBitDaVinci
      @TwoBitDaVinci  Před 13 dny

      they are compressed in the direction the fire truck is traveling in, and spread out as it passes.

  • @JohnnyJenkins
    @JohnnyJenkins Před 17 dny

    It certainly has nothing to do with the solar flares storm this weekend

    • @i_am_a_toast_of_french
      @i_am_a_toast_of_french Před dnem

      most of the tornadoes that happened this year happened before the solar flare, so you're correct !!! :)

  • @C.Fecteau-AU-MJ13
    @C.Fecteau-AU-MJ13 Před 16 dny

    America once again reminding me why Australia is so much safer... In every respect.
    Yes, including the wildlife.

    • @redhatpat
      @redhatpat Před 16 dny

      Literally hours after this video went up we got hit by a tornado here in WA that tore through a school and prison 😅

    • @C.Fecteau-AU-MJ13
      @C.Fecteau-AU-MJ13 Před 15 dny

      @@redhatpat Geez Louise... I've always been fascinated by tornadoes and it's on my bucket list to see one in real life.
      But I sure as hell wouldn't wanna be living where you guys get them on the regular. Stay safe out there mate!
      Hopefully the season isn't as bad as they're predicting, but I'll be sure to be watching the kick arse videos from the safety down unda.
      That said, there was one in Western Australia last week, which is very unusual.

  • @barbriley583
    @barbriley583 Před 17 dny

    2011 was bad too

  • @jerryhoward6007
    @jerryhoward6007 Před 17 dny

    Elites/Reterraforming earth/geoengineering/EMF'S/DEW's/weather modification/weapons/control/Patents/Inventions/history/archives/?/ - duck duck go!

  • @johnb1010
    @johnb1010 Před 17 dny

    Tornados are good for global warming. Like Giant country size turbo fans....A huge amount of energy is released from the heat trying to escape the ceiling

  • @Cujo8600
    @Cujo8600 Před 15 dny

    So are you saying tornado season isn’t here yet? Are you talking about tornado season 2025?

  • @TTTzzzz
    @TTTzzzz Před 17 dny

    It is going to get much worse.

  • @PalimpsestProd
    @PalimpsestProd Před 17 dny

    It's marketing for the sequel movie, right?

  • @dhoffman4955
    @dhoffman4955 Před 17 dny

    A tornado warning will be sent if predicted by radar. Meteorologists don’t wait for the tornado to touch down before sending warning; there would be too little time to seek shelter.

    • @TheMrCougarful
      @TheMrCougarful Před 17 dny

      Nobody these days pays any attention to science, didn't you know that?

  • @donfields1234
    @donfields1234 Před 17 dny

    If you want info on Tornados and severe weather one choice stand far above ALL the rest: Ryan Hall Ya'll's utube stream period.

  • @phillipweber7195
    @phillipweber7195 Před 17 dny

    All it would take (probably) to stop or even reverse climate change is marine cloud brightening. According to projections, it would cost just a few billion dollars per year and could easily lower global temperatures by one or two degrees celsius. A single industrialized country could pay for that and the economic benefits would far outweigh the cost. Seems to be perfectly safe too. If something goes wrong, it can be stopped and the water droplets that were blown into the clouds would fall down within a few days.
    As I see it, this is the only way to go forward:
    Accept that there will always be far too many people who don't care and who will eventually use up most fossile fuel reserves (and if it's not in the western world, then it will be in China, India, Brazil and so on). During that time we artificially lower global temperatures and make use of that time finding alternative energy sources (like better photovoltaics, tidal or geothermal power - maybe even nuclear fusion) that can then eventually be used to not only replace fossil fuels but also to power whatever methods for sequestering carbon dioxide we've come up with in the meantime.

  • @jamesmcdermott5048
    @jamesmcdermott5048 Před 16 dny

    Occasionally, we see an anti-cyclonic tornado... Why?

    • @i_am_a_toast_of_french
      @i_am_a_toast_of_french Před dnem +1

      because when an updraft lifts a horizontal axis of rotating air, it normally forms 2 columns of air rotating in opposite directions and the anticyclonic one usually dies off but occasionally survives

  • @oliviahodges5161
    @oliviahodges5161 Před 17 dny

    4 I will bring 🌪️ forth, saith the Lord of hosts, and it shall enter into the house of the thief, and into the house of him that sweareth falsely by my name: and it shall remain in the midst of his house, and shall consume it with the timber thereof and the stones thereof.

  • @tomgallagher9358
    @tomgallagher9358 Před 17 dny

    I think you need to do some research on Haarp. And do some checks on your editing. You are behind the curve! Wake up!

  • @Cujo8600
    @Cujo8600 Před 15 dny

    Good attempt at a video but just feels like it’s a click grab. It should have come out in February. Not mid May. Also needs a bit more editing and refinement of the content to get rid of errors.

  • @lucidgoetia9995
    @lucidgoetia9995 Před 17 dny

    I feel like I said this recently 😅

  • @dexooh
    @dexooh Před 17 dny

    Very muffled voice! Could you adjust the eq a bit to make it more clear?

  • @nathankeys199
    @nathankeys199 Před 17 dny

    Hurricane ? Or tornado?

  • @tr2319
    @tr2319 Před 6 dny

    and as of today.?

  • @filiplachance8576
    @filiplachance8576 Před 17 dny +2

    Oh please, no. Don't confuse tornadoes with hurricanes. Enough confused people as it is.

    • @filiplachance8576
      @filiplachance8576 Před 17 dny

      But I can see you meant to say "tornado season" so it's all good 😉

  • @Dope-Five-0
    @Dope-Five-0 Před 17 dny

    I respect and appreciate the effort and time that someone puts into creating videos. However, the information that's communicated needs to be nothing short of compendious.
    @ 2:36, the verbiage doesn't align with the illustration. The description of the air masses in the gulf and Southwest are backwards. Also, it's the culmination of 3 ingredients, not 2 (in terms of air masses) that are "key" in a tornadic recipe. The dry air from the southwest is its own entity
    The depiction of the Polar jet stream is inaccurate as well.
    Jet streams "follow the Sun; as the Sun's elevation increases each day in the spring the average latitude of the jet stream shifts poleward. By summer in the Northern Hemisphere, the polar jet is typically found near the U.S.- Canadian border. Depending, the polar AND the subtropical jet will be situated over the continental US; both of which contribute significantly to tornadic development.

  • @stevewinner
    @stevewinner Před 17 dny

    You start out talking about hurricanes then switch to tornadoes... Did I miss something or a corelation?

  • @freeheeler09
    @freeheeler09 Před 17 dny +1

    Ricky, you are so wrong with your rain comment. You can watch real time satellite imagery of afternoon thunderstorms building up, or storms sweeping in from the coasts. As a kid, my dad was stationed in Okinawa, an island off Japan. We actually got hit by a surprise typhoon! No warning. Yeah, the forecasts aren't exactly perfect, but folks get tornado and flood warnings nowadays. As penance for your flip disrespect to the thousands of meteorologists out there, you are to say ten Hail Marys and then interview some meteorologists and do a show about modern weather forecasting! And stop aid
    Ing and abetting the science haters. Just stop!

    • @TwoBitDaVinci
      @TwoBitDaVinci  Před 17 dny

      I love meteorologists and its why I had so much fun researching this video! I'll do my hail mary's, but know its all just fun and joking around. CHeers!

  • @BeenGolden
    @BeenGolden Před 17 dny +2

    "Dont tell them we control the weather. Tell them we predicted it. Now get nostradaumes granson on the phone and ask him why ww3 is taking so long we only planned since for fkin ever sheeeeesh"

  • @HobbesNJoe
    @HobbesNJoe Před 17 dny +2

    Ricky, you used to research what YOU are interested in. Please, stop trying to cater to the algorithm. Your channel will improve if you do.

    • @TwoBitDaVinci
      @TwoBitDaVinci  Před 12 dny

      Hey I wanted to tell you I"ve been thinking about your comment for a few days now, and I just wanted to tell you it really stuck with me. It's hard to do 52 of these each and every week. Little time to rest or celebrate, or commiserate lol..
      It's also been so many years I'm equal parts overjoyed, older, and a little burnt out. It's a very tough thing, and I decided I may step away and take a week off here and there... and continue to remember how lucky I am to do this. And you have NO IDEA how powerful comments like yours are man... If you're EVER in SD let me know, dinner is on me! thank you again!

    • @janasorensen2556
      @janasorensen2556 Před 10 dny

      Plenty of research has already been done to prove that these tornadoes are being generated/ exacerbated by weather mod activities.

    • @i_am_a_toast_of_french
      @i_am_a_toast_of_french Před dnem

      @@janasorensen2556 please cite something from the plenty of research you claim there to be then

  • @sg9414
    @sg9414 Před 17 dny +1

    When I explain the Dawin awards to anyone, I use the example of someone living in a trailer in Oklahoma (even tho Texas gets more ..probably cuz it's a larger state)

    • @Guysonline2942
      @Guysonline2942 Před 17 dny

      Maybe they're poor. Also what's a Dawin award, you simpleton

    • @YeeLeeHaw
      @YeeLeeHaw Před 17 dny +1

      It's actually an investment. If the tornado hits the trailer it might fly away to a better spot, increasing the value of the home.

  • @capnpugwash5403
    @capnpugwash5403 Před 17 dny

    So long as we don't say it's all down to CO2 cow farts and man's impact.
    It's on record if the agencies were honest we are actually colder now than for a long time. Any one heard of the 30's heat waves and dust bowls?
    Weather is weather, it can be dramatic over short periods of time, although again it is on record if the records are taken over a long period that NO event is greater than we have already experienced. Whether it be hurricanes, tornadoes, snow, heatwaves, forest fires Etc.
    We are about to slide in the next 5 years or so into a cold period. Which may last for quite some time.
    We NEED CO2, it is the gas of life for plants, it is already at an all time low. If this met zero stupidity continues we will be creating an extinction event.

    • @i_am_a_toast_of_french
      @i_am_a_toast_of_french Před dnem

      the 30's dust bowls was literally caused by humans overfarming the great plains which ruined all the topsoil and made it blow away
      there is no evidence that a cold period will happen in 5 years
      co2 is not at an all time low, and plants already have enough of it

  • @philipvecchio3292
    @philipvecchio3292 Před 17 dny +1

    It makes you appreciate the sacrifices that Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton made to release Dorothy into a Tornado.

  • @katanaridingremy
    @katanaridingremy Před 17 dny +2

    Is it just me or does it seem like the videos on this channel are designed as Cliff Notes for 9th graders on science topics instead of being for grown adults interested in the science of topics and are hoping for detailed analysis. Like I go to channels like Kyle Hill, Limiting Factor, Munro channel and am overjoyed by the deep analysis. Truly, for the amount of adverts this channel has please do deeper dives and really explore topics

    • @TheMrCougarful
      @TheMrCougarful Před 17 dny

      The script is probably written via ChatGPT, so yeah, you are likely correct.

    • @slayer18726
      @slayer18726 Před 17 dny

      Convective Chronicles does great meteorological videos about in-depth forecasts to case studies of past weather events . Highly recommend if details are what you are looking for.

  • @TeeG-er3eh
    @TeeG-er3eh Před 16 dny

    I wonder if people will ever read Deuteronomy 28?

  • @beaudavis3808
    @beaudavis3808 Před 17 dny

    Did you had to mention them? Really?

  • @albertvanlingen7590
    @albertvanlingen7590 Před 17 dny +1

    The moment I hear "scientists say" I know it's BS. This season is nothing in comparison to record past breakouts like 1974. Stop click-bate hysteria 😱

    • @undertow2142
      @undertow2142 Před 17 dny

      Your comment just reveals to everyone you have a smooth brain. That’s not how natural phenomena work and not what “scientists said”. Did you know scientists aren’t like Voltron? They don’t assemble into a single thing. They study the physical world and make predictions based on evidence and observations. Its not gospel it’s subject you change and is always evolving. It’s the opposite to you, making all your decisions with ego and bias. When you have severe MR it’s all you have I know but maybe read a book or something damn.

  • @dreuxlescell3184
    @dreuxlescell3184 Před 17 dny +1

    Jesus said in the Bible as to when His return will be.
    We ARE the last generation of human beings on this earth!
    He said as recorded in the Bible to watch for changes earth wide, which is exactly what you are presenting in this particular video!!!

    • @undertow2142
      @undertow2142 Před 17 dny +1

      I keep my Bible under the bathroom sink just in case I run out of toilet paper. Jesus doesn’t want me to be stranded on a toilet bowl.

  • @rl8073
    @rl8073 Před 17 dny +1

    Dudes just making a click bait video because weather channels are trending and hes clearly clueless and is speaking out of his butt. "Don't recommend channel." is the best option.

  • @adroper62
    @adroper62 Před 17 dny

    This is an interesting overview, but it is impossible to cover the topic of tornadoes in a 12-minute video. The primary reason the US leads the world in tornado generation is our geographic set-up of the Rockies west of the plains, the Gulf of Mexico as a persistent source of moisture and abundant cold Arctic air. You touched on cold air, warm moist air, and shear effectively, but the Rockies are one of the US's critical amplifiers for tornadoes.
    The Rockies produce a phenomenon called the "dry line," AKA the Marfa front. When this front interacts with the mix of cold air, warm-moist air, and vertical shear (from 2K ' and above), supercells pop more than when the Marfa front is not present or diminished. Much more goes into forecasting tornadoes, and thanks for doing this video.
    I am a retired USAF meteorologist who was a Severe Weather Action Team (SWAT - corny, I know) leader at Little Rock Air Force base in 1986's-1990, and this video taught this old dog a new trick - Correlation Coefficient wasn't a tool I am familiar with, primarily because NEXRADS was rolling out when I left Arkansas, and that was the last operational position I had in the US before retiring.

  • @KingOfGamesss
    @KingOfGamesss Před 17 dny

    Perth, Western Australia just had it's first Tornado

    • @beaudavis3808
      @beaudavis3808 Před 17 dny

      I really do not trust you.

    • @KingOfGamesss
      @KingOfGamesss Před 17 dny

      @@beaudavis3808 You know me?

    • @TheMrCougarful
      @TheMrCougarful Před 17 dny

      Don't worry, there will be a lot of them before long.

    • @KingOfGamesss
      @KingOfGamesss Před 17 dny

      @@TheMrCougarful Why do you think the other guy doesn't trust me? LOL

  • @RScottMelton
    @RScottMelton Před 17 dny

    I don't understand the misstatements in this video considering that NOAA's graph shows a significant decline in strong (F3+) since 1970. Likewise, when normalized, all tornado damage is trending down since 1950. By every metric, climate related disasters (flooding, drought, forest fires, etc.) are very much on the decline over the last 100 years. Not that there can't be outlier years which can be cherry picked, but overall, this video seems like climate crisis fear mongering.

    • @TwoBitDaVinci
      @TwoBitDaVinci  Před 17 dny

      who ever mentioned climate crisis ? I know I didn't ...

  • @maggiekelley259
    @maggiekelley259 Před 17 dny +1

    This whole string of comments makes me realize how completely out of touch your audience is with these communities and vice versa. Change will never happen if we don't make an effort to understand other people, even if we don't like what we hear.

  • @user-hr9ht5mk3f
    @user-hr9ht5mk3f Před 17 dny +2

    Usually any prediction on the future by scientists are wrong. So why should we listen, ponder your thoughts? Given that's not clickbait but an actual thought of you.

    • @YeeLeeHaw
      @YeeLeeHaw Před 17 dny

      3:46

    • @michaelcavalier8750
      @michaelcavalier8750 Před 17 dny

      "Record breaking", but so far, it is the 5th most prolific tornado season. So, not breaking any records yet, but could. No one knows.

    • @TheMrCougarful
      @TheMrCougarful Před 17 dny

      Start paying attention.

    • @e5b7-wr811ouhih
      @e5b7-wr811ouhih Před 17 dny +1

      i smell some climate change denial here

    • @TheMrCougarful
      @TheMrCougarful Před 17 dny

      @@e5b7-wr811ouhih I was noticing an odor of Flat Earth, as well. Science denial is a kind of brain rot.

  • @williamgidrewicz4775
    @williamgidrewicz4775 Před 5 dny

    There is another crucial factor and that is these flying star cycles. A cosmology of the east that deals with earth's inner energies. This twenty year cycle the 9th is what is termed a severe energy change from the 8th which ended in February. 9 on this compass wheel is nourished by 4 which is termed the WIND = TORNADOES AND FIERCE STORMS. This year is a 3., but if you take the IChing trigram for a 9 and put that over the trigram for 3 then you get Hexagram 20 BITING THROUGH THE DARKNESS. . THIS HEXAGRAM HAS THE SOUTH 9, THE EAST 3 AND THE INNER TRIGRAMS OF 1 NORTH AND THE NORTHEAST 8. THE COMPASS DIRECTION MISSING IS THE WIND "TORNADOES" 4. WHEN ONE NUMBER OF A SERIES OF COMPASS DIRECTIONS IS MISSING THEN AS THE OLD ADAGE GOES "NATURE ABHORES A VACUUM" ! AS WE ALL KNOW THE WIND AND TORNADOES AND HURRICANES ARE A VERY NASTY VACUUM!😢 THIS ILLUSTRIOUS SCIENCE OF FLYING STARS COSMOLOGY IS USED IN MANY AREAS OF SCIENCES

  • @BradKarthauser
    @BradKarthauser Před 17 dny

    Solar activity drives tornadoes.

    • @graphixkillzzz
      @graphixkillzzz Před 17 dny +1

      what a remedial understanding you have of this phenomena 🤔🤷‍♂️

    • @galvanaut7119
      @galvanaut7119 Před 17 dny

      Solar activity drives about everything so this is not really a point.

  • @tonyrome068
    @tonyrome068 Před 17 dny

    Mathew 24

  • @greysonward224
    @greysonward224 Před 17 dny +1

    Bro you're a little late tornado season ends in a couple weeks 90% of it as already happened lol

  • @raymondpeters9186
    @raymondpeters9186 Před 16 dny

    If you want a tornado proof home Pumicecrete is by far the best building material on the planet
    Take care Ray

  • @beonfly1111
    @beonfly1111 Před 15 dny

    🌟"... Nation shall Rise against Nation, and Kingdom against Kingdom" : "And Great Earthquakes shall be in Divers Places, and Famines, and Pestilences; and Fearful Sights and Great Signs shall there be from Heaven". ... "Gospel" of "Luke" Ch. 21 V. 10 + 11 "Amen" !

  • @megaplay
    @megaplay Před 17 dny

    BlkFamLovin. Tends to tell the future