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originally posted by: eriktheawful
The guy says: "I'd better back up to get under this bridge." and then says he's never been in a tornado before.
Well, no DUH! If you had, you'd know one of the worst places to be is under a bridge or over pass!
Great video, but he was just a bit too close to it, and should have just continued backing away from the area.
originally posted by: texasgirl
originally posted by: Trueman
a reply to: eriktheawful
I never saw a tornado, I'm clueless. Why is not good to be under a bridge?
The wind gets caught under the bridge and intensifies, sucking you out. This is only hearsay, as I've never been under a bridge during a tornado. I have seen tornadoes, though. The one here in Dallas a few years ago that had the famous semis thrown in the air totally frightened me.
originally posted by: Skywatcher2011
originally posted by: texasgirl
originally posted by: Trueman
a reply to: eriktheawful
I never saw a tornado, I'm clueless. Why is not good to be under a bridge?
The wind gets caught under the bridge and intensifies, sucking you out. This is only hearsay, as I've never been under a bridge during a tornado. I have seen tornadoes, though. The one here in Dallas a few years ago that had the famous semis thrown in the air totally frightened me.
In that case he might as well left his truck right in path of tornado because what you say makes no sense at all. *derp*
If he parked really close to a wall under the bridge the convection would hold his truck more in place like drafting behind a race car. He is safer under the bridge as long as he is not in middle of bridge.
originally posted by: Daughter2
Thanks for posting this - I live in Western Illinois. I noticed a pattern of severe storms in the last few decades.
It seems as soon as the storm gets close to 39, it goes Northeast or Southeast. So you have major storms staying pretty east of 39 or South of 80 - which is good because it avoids the City and populated suburbs. If that storm hit just 10 miles west, it would have been devastating because this is were Northern Illinois University is located with thousands of students living on and off campus.
I guess it's just luck but this lucky pattern has happened again and again. You might say it's because of the lake but the lake wouldn't make the storms move over 50 miles away - and generally they actually add to bad weather.
originally posted by: Skywatcher2011
originally posted by: texasgirl
originally posted by: Trueman
a reply to: eriktheawful
I never saw a tornado, I'm clueless. Why is not good to be under a bridge?
The wind gets caught under the bridge and intensifies, sucking you out. This is only hearsay, as I've never been under a bridge during a tornado. I have seen tornadoes, though. The one here in Dallas a few years ago that had the famous semis thrown in the air totally frightened me.
In that case he might as well left his truck right in path of tornado because what you say makes no sense at all. *derp*
If he parked really close to a wall under the bridge the convection would hold his truck more in place like drafting behind a race car. He is safer under the bridge as long as he is not in middle of bridge.
originally posted by: dogstar23
originally posted by: Daughter2
Thanks for posting this - I live in Western Illinois. I noticed a pattern of severe storms in the last few decades.
It seems as soon as the storm gets close to 39, it goes Northeast or Southeast. So you have major storms staying pretty east of 39 or South of 80 - which is good because it avoids the City and populated suburbs. If that storm hit just 10 miles west, it would have been devastating because this is were Northern Illinois University is located with thousands of students living on and off campus.
I guess it's just luck but this lucky pattern has happened again and again. You might say it's because of the lake but the lake wouldn't make the storms move over 50 miles away - and generally they actually add to bad weather.
I live in the NW suburbs, and for years we've joked about the "weather dome" we're under. I don't want an EF-4+ rolling through my neighborhood, but we almost always get a 90% reduction (that's unscientific, BTW) in storm severity, compared to 20-30 minutes drive west, south, or north.
While lightning blasted away to our north & south & tornados & accompanying severe thunderstorms to the west, I was outside in shorts and a t-shirt, grilling and watching - occasionally popping in to avoid a spot of rain.
ETA - wth? Just watched the video. Was this guy snacking on a bottle full of xanax on his road trip or what? "Golly, it looks like a big spinny cloud is about to roll over me. No worries, I'll put my wipers on. I'll have to get out later and see if there's any damage to the truck. I wonder if my hotel will have free USA today. Maybe I should get out and walk to the store and buy a paper while this spinny cloud passes by, harmlessly.