Posted on 10/08/2025 5:02:27 AM PDT by texas booster
ENDERLIN, N.D. — A tornado that killed three people this summer in southeast North Dakota has been reclassified EF5, the most damaging level for a twister.
The June 20 tornado that destroyed at least two homes, damaged other buildings and derailed a train near Enderlin reached speeds that exceeded 210 mph, the National Weather Service announced Monday, Oct. 6. The minimum speed for an EF5 tornado is 201 mph.
"It is a significant part of North Dakota history, being one of three tornadoes now officially being rated as F5 or EF5," said Tyler Thomas, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Grand Forks.
EF5 is the highest rating for a tornado on the Enhanced Fujita Scale. Until 2007, meteorologists used the Fujita Scale to classify tornadoes.
(Excerpt) Read more at inforum.com ...
"The Fargo F5 back in 1957 was actually the first F5 ever rated by Ted Fujita," Thomas said.
The other North Dakota tornado to receive an F5 ranking was a 1953 twister that hit Fort Rice, about 20 miles south of Bismarck. That tornado hit between 260 and 318 mph and was 1,800 feet wide, the weather service said.
The small town was mostly destroyed, with the tornado killing two people and injuring 20, the Weather Service said.
The last EF5 tornado in the U.S. was recorded in 2013 in Moore, Oklahoma.
The June tornado near Enderlin was initially classified as EF3 on the Enhanced Fujita scale and was one of multiple tornadoes that storms produced in the region that day.
There is a gif at the top of the article that shows the actual tornado from a Ring doorbell. Cool.
“”””lofted tanker cars, including an empty one blown about 475 feet away from the tracks,””””
Yes, that was impressive.
EF5 tornado
As in, “That was an effing five tornado, dude!”
Seems like appropriate nomenclature.
I was considering a Ring doorbell, but not after that.
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