National Weather Service improves tornado rating system
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[February 22, 2007]
WASHINGTON --
NOAA's National Weather Service fully implemented the Enhanced
Fujita (EF) scale to rate tornadoes, replacing the original Fujita
Scale, effective February 1, 2007. The EF scale will continue to
rate tornadoes on a scale from zero to five, but ranges in wind
speed will be more accurate with the improved rating scale.
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"The EF scale provides more detailed guidelines that will allow the
National Weather Service to more accurately rate tornadoes that
strike the United States," said Brig. Gen. David L. Johnson, U.S.
Air Force (Ret.), director of NOAA's National Weather Service. "The
EF scale still estimates wind speeds but more precisely takes into
account the materials affected and the construction of the
structures damaged by the tornado." The Fujita scale was developed
in 1971 by T. Theodore Fujita, Ph.D., to rate tornadoes and estimate
associated wind speed based on the damage they cause. The EF scale
refines and improves the original scale. It was developed by the
Texas Tech University Wind Science and Engineering Research Center,
along with a forum of wind engineers, universities, private
companies, government organizations, private sector meteorologists,
and NOAA meteorologists from across the country.
Limitations of the original Fujita scale may have led to
inconsistent ratings, including possible overestimates of associated
wind speeds. The EF scale incorporates more damage indicators and
degrees of damage than the original Fujita scale, allowing more
detailed analysis and better correlation between damage and wind
speed. The original Fujita scale historical database will not
change. An F5 tornado rated years ago is still an F5, but the wind
speed associated with the tornado may have been somewhat less than
previously estimated. A correlation between the original Fujita
scale and the EF scale has been developed. This makes it possible to
express ratings in terms of one scale to the other, preserving the
historical database.
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[Text copied from
National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration news release received
from Chris Miller, National Weather Service,
Lincoln office]
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