У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно 6 SECONDS: The Fastest Tornado Intensification Ever Recorded (EF5 Smithville) или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
🌪️ BlueAbove - THE FASTEST TORNADO INTENSIFICATION EVER RECORDED April 27, 2011. Smithville, Mississippi. A tornado went from EF0 to EF5 intensity in just 6 SECONDS. Six seconds to transform from a weak twister into one of the most violent tornadoes ever documented. Half the town erased in 3 minutes. ⚡ WHAT YOU'LL DISCOVER: ✅ The unprecedented 6-second intensification from EF0 to EF5 ✅ How the tornado carved trenches into solid ground in under a second ✅ The SUV thrown 3/4 mile and slammed into a water tower ✅ Why April 27, 2011 produced FOUR EF5 tornadoes in one day ✅ Johnny Parker: The 16-year-old who saved dozens of lives ✅ Survivor testimonies from the 3-minute nightmare ✅ Why Dixie Alley tornadoes are more deadly than Tornado Alley ✅ The aftermath and 13-year recovery of Smithville 💥 SHOCKING FACTS: EF0 to EF5 in 6 seconds (fastest ever recorded) 225 tornadoes touched down across the US on April 27, 2011 4 EF5 tornadoes in ONE DAY (12-year drought broken) Smithville tornado: 37 miles long, 3/4 mile wide 23 people killed, 130+ injured Ford Explorer thrown 3/4 mile, dented water tower Ground scouring over 1 foot deep in less than 1 second Winds exceeded 200 mph for 3 minutes straight 🔬 THE SCIENCE: Learn why this tornado intensified so rapidly. Understand the difference between EF0 (65-85 mph winds) and EF5 (200+ mph winds). Discover how rapid intensification works and why meteorologists still struggle to predict it. See actual footage of the massive wedge tornado approaching Smithville. 💔 HUMAN STORIES: Johnny Parker: 16-year-old weather enthusiast whose text alerts saved lives Carla Jones: Aunt who died shielding three children in a bathtub Brandy Holloway: Waitress who survived in Mel's Diner walk-in cooler Jimmy Cowie: Driver lifted and thrown while trying to outrun the tornado Ruth & Roy Lee Estess: Elderly couple torn apart by the winds 🏘️ THE DESTRUCTION: City hall, post office, police station, medical clinic, churches - all gone. Homes swept from foundations. Vehicles wrapped around trees. A 1965 Chevrolet pickup vanished completely. Tombstones scattered. The EE Pickle Funeral Home reduced to bare concrete. 🚨 APRIL 27, 2011 SUPER OUTBREAK: This wasn't just about Smithville. April 27, 2011 was one of the deadliest tornado outbreaks in U.S. history: 225 tornadoes in one day 4 EF5 tornadoes (first time since 1974) 316+ people killed across multiple states $11 billion in damages Tornadoes from 3:30 AM to nearly midnight 🎖️ JOHNNY PARKER - TEEN HERO: Since September 2010, 16-year-old Johnny Parker ran a text-based weather alert service for Smithville residents. When he saw the tornado signature intensify on radar, he sent his most urgent message: "Get to a safe place now." Those who listened survived. In 2024, Smithville honored him by naming a street "Johnny Parker Street." ⚠️ THE REALITY: EF5 tornadoes are rare but not impossible. The Smithville tornado proved that: Intensification can happen in seconds with no warning Even strong buildings can't withstand 200+ mph winds Underground shelters are the only truly safe option Technology and early warnings save lives Community support is essential for recovery 🌍 CLIMATE & FUTURE: As weather patterns shift, extreme tornado outbreaks may become more common. Understanding events like April 27, 2011 helps us prepare for future disasters. Investment in shelters, infrastructure, and education saves lives. 💬 JOIN THE DISCUSSION: Have you experienced a tornado? Does your community have adequate shelter options? What warning systems are in place where you live? Share your thoughts in the comments. 🔔 SUBSCRIBE to BlueAbove for more in-depth disaster documentaries covering tornadoes, hurricanes, floods, and extreme weather events that shaped history. 👍 LIKE if this story opened your eyes to tornado danger, and SHARE with anyone in tornado-prone areas. #SmithvilleTornado #EF5 #April272011 #TornadoOutbreak #DixieAlley #ExtremeWeather #WeatherDisaster #BlueAbove #TornadoDocumentary #Smithville #Mississippi #NaturalDisaster --- ⚠️ WARNING: This documentary contains descriptions of death, injury, and extreme destruction. Viewer discretion advised.