2015 was a big year for tornadoes in Germany. This one in particular was a monster, and every bit as strong as a violent wedge that you'd see in Alabama or Oklahoma.
Das waren keine Blitztreffer bei 1:11, sondern Lichtbögen der Hochspannungsleitungen, die dadurch entstehen, wenn diese sich bei den hohen Windgeschwindigkeiten berühren oder sogar durchgerissen werden. Im englischen sprechen Sturmjäger bei sowas von sog. "Power flashes". Die Stecker der Geräte zu ziehen wäre Zeitverschwendung gewesen, wenn man bedenkt, dass der Tornado direkt in die Richtung der beiden zieht.
Das war sehr schlimm in Bützow,Vorallem sind so grosse Tornados der Reihe F4 sehr selten In Deutschland am meisten treten Tornados der Art F1 / F2 auf Und ungefähr 30 mal im Jahr.
Those are large and densely populated countries in Europe's main "Tornado Alley", which stretches from northern France over inter alia the Benelux countries, Germany & northern italy (excluding the alps) all the way into western Russia and is mostly active during summer. There is also a second smaller tornado hotspot going from southern italy all the way into western turkey, which is mainly active from late autumn to early spring. Unfortunately i can't really explain the science behind this without probably messing something up.
@@wdotor I mean just from geology of that area there’s lots of mountains, the alps and the mountains in Italy are probably there Rocky Mountains because that’s where you get cold air, and in western parts of Europe you’re really close to North Pole and the south of you is Africa, idk that’s just my hypothesis on Europe
@@LorenzoLol1111I’m from germany and I can probably explain. So in most cases when there are heavy storms in central europe it works like this: A high or low pressure system (that doesn’t matter) is located over the mediterranean sea which is pushing hot and humid air into central europe. Then a low pressure system with a powerful coldfront comes from the Atlantic and triggers these storms. In the case of the Butzow Tornado it went exactly the way as I described it. The low was named Zoran and it triggered a small tornado outbreak in Germany, I think 4-6, including the Bützow Tornado were documented. So in Europe the Mediterranean sea works like the Gulf of Mexico in the tornado alley.
@@LorenzoLol1111 In 1898, my hometown was struck by a F4 tornado, and like 2 years ago, 2 tornadoes were reported just 2 miles away from the city. I can remember that i saw the rotating storm, but not the tornadoes. It's crazy to think about it...
Damage surveys show that the tornado grew to nearly a mile wide shortly after this video was taken. Unfortunately, the tornado also got wrapped in rain shortly thereafter, obscuring the visuals.
about one (or more) tornado(es) of that intensity every few years in Germany. Sometimes (rarely) of even higher intensity. But the width of the tornado (1,5km | ~1mi) is in fact really rare for Germany.
germany sees 30 - 60 confirmed tornadoes each year some of which reaches F2+ ratings In addition 100s of tornadoes are reported to the german tornado list each year
It was a wedge one. Look it became wedge by coming down here. Joplin back in 2013 went from first death man walking to wegde this one here went straight into a wedge one and I was i this one had to outrun it. Never ever again to been in such.
So dont come with your fking shit here that's not a wedge one it was it went straight to it and tearing the trasmators off and I was close by and had to outrun it. You know a damn f about tornados and been in one espcially in Europe
How does this not have more views? This video is awesome.
Its that big of a deal
this is for sure one of the best footages of a wedge tornado ngl
Did you watch first 10 minutes of the moore oklahoma tornado?
Tornado Alley.
To be honest.. I saw better wedge tornado videos from America…
@@stormchasernichtpit1493 who hasn't? America is home of the wedges.
@@BlahBlooBlee4205 yes
2015 was a big year for tornadoes in Germany. This one in particular was a monster, and every bit as strong as a violent wedge that you'd see in Alabama or Oklahoma.
Yes and the one in Bonndorf was almost rated F4 too these were pretty dangerous
What???
Damn..
Das waren keine Blitztreffer bei 1:11, sondern Lichtbögen der Hochspannungsleitungen, die dadurch entstehen, wenn diese sich bei den hohen Windgeschwindigkeiten berühren oder sogar durchgerissen werden. Im englischen sprechen Sturmjäger bei sowas von sog. "Power flashes". Die Stecker der Geräte zu ziehen wäre Zeitverschwendung gewesen, wenn man bedenkt, dass der Tornado direkt in die Richtung der beiden zieht.
Scary & awesome at the same time! That thing was huge right from the get-go!
I'm surprised this hasn't gotten more views.
Das war sehr schlimm in Bützow,Vorallem sind so grosse Tornados der Reihe F4 sehr selten In Deutschland am meisten treten Tornados der Art F1 / F2 auf Und ungefähr 30 mal im Jahr.
most are F0 - F1 Less than 25% are F2's or above These tornadoes are in general rare no matter where you are
Bützow war ein F3, kein F4..
100-200 im jahr 50-70 davon unbestätigt die dunkelziffer noch höher und die meisten irgendwo im nirgendwo
It looked like it was headed right for the camera, no?
yes Look at the left and right motion at the base That's the main indicator that it's heading towards you
No as long it moves it's fines when it looks like it "stands" still it either comes to you or moves away
Cuts out just as the footage is really starting to get good.
I think he did that because he peobaly seek shelter!
this tornado rivals those here in the US.
really you have really violent tornadoes
was für eine gute Aufnahme
sudden realization that the clean view is now a wall of wind & water 1:24 - 1:38
Wahnsinn . Ghost train was coming at the end !!!!
Nope, that was the tornadic windfield picking up and starting to wrap rain around the twister.
Why is it always the same European countries (Italy, Germany and Poland)getting hit by tornadoes, is there geological science behind it?
Those are large and densely populated countries in Europe's main "Tornado Alley", which stretches from northern France over inter alia the Benelux countries, Germany & northern italy (excluding the alps) all the way into western Russia and is mostly active during summer. There is also a second smaller tornado hotspot going from southern italy all the way into western turkey, which is mainly active from late autumn to early spring. Unfortunately i can't really explain the science behind this without probably messing something up.
@@wdotor I mean just from geology of that area there’s lots of mountains, the alps and the mountains in Italy are probably there Rocky Mountains because that’s where you get cold air, and in western parts of Europe you’re really close to North Pole and the south of you is Africa, idk that’s just my hypothesis on Europe
@@LorenzoLol1111I’m from germany and I can probably explain. So in most cases when there are heavy storms in central europe it works like this: A high or low pressure system (that doesn’t matter) is located over the mediterranean sea which is pushing hot and humid air into central europe. Then a low pressure system with a powerful coldfront comes from the Atlantic and triggers these storms. In the case of the Butzow Tornado it went exactly the way as I described it. The low was named Zoran and it triggered a small tornado outbreak in Germany, I think 4-6, including the Bützow Tornado were documented.
So in Europe the Mediterranean sea works like the Gulf of Mexico in the tornado alley.
@@ceoxx2420 thank you, that makes more sense
@@LorenzoLol1111 In 1898, my hometown was struck by a F4 tornado, and like 2 years ago, 2 tornadoes were reported just 2 miles away from the city. I can remember that i saw the rotating storm, but not the tornadoes. It's crazy to think about it...
I call this the under tornado because undertale was released on that year
Heimatscholle..
0.5 or 0.6 mile wide I think
Damage surveys show that the tornado grew to nearly a mile wide shortly after this video was taken. Unfortunately, the tornado also got wrapped in rain shortly thereafter, obscuring the visuals.
1 mile wide and afterwards got rain wrapped... I chased that thing...
wowow what a video! also pretty rare im sure
about one (or more) tornado(es) of that intensity every few years in Germany. Sometimes (rarely) of even higher intensity. But the width of the tornado (1,5km | ~1mi) is in fact really rare for Germany.
germany sees 30 - 60 confirmed tornadoes each year some of which reaches F2+ ratings In addition 100s of tornadoes are reported to the german tornado list each year
Wow.
I doubt that this was a wedge
Peak width of 1.5 kilometers
It was a wedge one. Look it became wedge by coming down here. Joplin back in 2013 went from first death man walking to wegde this one here went straight into a wedge one and I was i this one had to outrun it. Never ever again to been in such.
So dont come with your fking shit here that's not a wedge one it was it went straight to it and tearing the trasmators off and I was close by and had to outrun it. You know a damn f about tornados and been in one espcially in Europe
latest at 1:17 i'd shit my pants and go inside :D
Dot une saim pas mach constituent iii hlr malik verd van papa kasiiiiiii
Ohhaaaaa heftig
Geil ein tornado.
Sal Chfti saim pas ma cher hier in vitaux verd zein asile mit hada 8 bon die familier amin saim jo verd on asile 8 yhergen ici glaub
Woooha
Bain kinder schtzi die sil sil ist zein regarder un tribune scjrbey 20 petsonne
To be honest Europe gets better footage of tornados than america.
of course That's because europeans aren't educated about the events making them record instead of seeking shelter
@@hvadskalvihedde2512 lol