Do you happen to have the realtime footage without being sped up or just a Timelapse? I'm a filmmaker here in Harrison looking for some footage for my film about the Solar Eclipse.
@HarrisonWxCamera18 сағат бұрын
We should still have the archive of the livestream and timelaspe.
@taystorm12Ай бұрын
Do you have the radar archive for the storm that traveled through OK into Bentonville and I think this is the same one? It went through 3 states and spawned multiple tornadoes.
@R2D2C_3poАй бұрын
Actually that storm was a long-track tornadic supercell that moved through parts of 5 different states! It started around Tulsa. From Tulsa it moved across Eastern Oklahoma and Northern Arkansas, and then across the Missouri Bootheel. Then it moved across the Mississippi River to the area around the Tennessee-Kentucky state line. That one supercell almost continuously kept dropping tornadoes for nearly 400 miles from Tulsa to deep inside Western Kentucky. A long-track tornadic supercell like that is fortunately a rare beast, but is extremely dangerous. Many of the worst tornado outbreaks in history have been caused by long-track tornadic supercells like that one!
@taystorm12Ай бұрын
@@R2D2C_3po thank you! I knew it was a long track but couldn't remember where it started. It's been a while since I've seen one just recycle itself over and over like that
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Do you happen to have the realtime footage without being sped up or just a Timelapse? I'm a filmmaker here in Harrison looking for some footage for my film about the Solar Eclipse.
We should still have the archive of the livestream and timelaspe.
Do you have the radar archive for the storm that traveled through OK into Bentonville and I think this is the same one? It went through 3 states and spawned multiple tornadoes.
Actually that storm was a long-track tornadic supercell that moved through parts of 5 different states! It started around Tulsa. From Tulsa it moved across Eastern Oklahoma and Northern Arkansas, and then across the Missouri Bootheel. Then it moved across the Mississippi River to the area around the Tennessee-Kentucky state line. That one supercell almost continuously kept dropping tornadoes for nearly 400 miles from Tulsa to deep inside Western Kentucky. A long-track tornadic supercell like that is fortunately a rare beast, but is extremely dangerous. Many of the worst tornado outbreaks in history have been caused by long-track tornadic supercells like that one!
@@R2D2C_3po thank you! I knew it was a long track but couldn't remember where it started. It's been a while since I've seen one just recycle itself over and over like that
So was this yesterday or today
Yesterday
Damn, I hope it was a decepticon
What happended?
Lightning hit a transformer across town