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How to Film a Tornado

goneaway writes: "An interesting examination of the competitive world of filming tornadoes or "torn porn" as they call it over at the Atlantic. A fair amount of attention is given to the mechanics of filming and the inventions created to "safely" film while all hell is breaking loose."

3 of 91 comments (clear)

  1. Re:aerodynamic/gyroscopic solution? by ddillman · · Score: 3, Informative

    There's a problem with this. A hurricane and a tornado are two entirely different animals. You're not going to be able to make a plane that will handle that kind of abuse. Especially not a small RC model.

    Hurricanes may be large and deadly, but their force is spread out, and the winds are relatively straight-line and slow (average what, 100MPH?).

    A tornado is an extremely chaotic beast, with a small vortex and much higher wind velocities (some approaching 300+MPH).

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  2. Follow the links by Godwin+O'Hitler · · Score: 2, Informative

    I won't abuse the article by copying the links here. When you see those photos and videos, seems crazy how anything so beautiful can be so destructive - or vice versa.

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    No, your children are not the special ones. Nor are your pets.
  3. Heh. by Scoria · · Score: 4, Informative

    IANAM (I am not a meteorologist), but...

    Civilians film a lot of the tornado footage with their home video cameras. I would suppose that it is more dramatic, considering the majority of these people don't have any training, are terrified, and escape unscathed by chance. Their emotions are in strong contrast to tornado enthusiasts, who, from most peoples' observations, usually appear intrigued, not frightened.

    Of course, to capture a tornado, a number of variables must be correct and you must meet several objectives first.

    Obviously, there must be light (or you must have nightvision). A great number of tornadoes occur during the night hours and probably aren't captured on film due to this reason.

    You must actually locate the area of a storm that is most likely to produce a tornado. The advent of Doppler [sic, it's named after a person] radar has made this task much less difficult. Meteorologists will usually search for the classic "hook and coil" signature that is indicative of a tornado.

    Finally, you must arrive at the target location before the tornado activity disippates. They usually last less than 20 minutes.

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