🍃 WIND and HURRICANE 3D Simulation 💨

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  • Опубликовано: 10 апр 2023
  • This video simulates the effect of wind from calm to the worst of storms. The effects they produce may vary in each scenario but this is approximately how it would look in reality.
    The Beaufort scale for wind and the Saffir Simpson scale for hurricanes have been used in this comparison.
    🢂MY WEBSITES🢀
    📷Instagram: / metaballstudios_official
    🐦Twitter: / metaballstudios
    🙂Facebook: / metaballstudios
    🎵MUSIC: (RUclips Library)
    The Drive - Kevin MacLeod
    📝SOURCES:
    www.weather.gov/mfl/beaufort
    www.weather.gov/mfl/saffirsim...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beaufor...
    🟪Credits free 3D models:
    Quixel.com
  • КиноКино

Комментарии • 769

  • @MetaBallStudios
    @MetaBallStudios  Год назад +232

    🟨🟥🟪
    The Beaufort scale for wind and the Saffir Simpson scale for hurricanes have been used in this comparison.
    Have you ever felt such a strong wind? Let me know your experiences here 👇👇
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    En esta comparación se han utilizado la escala Beaufort para el viento y la escala Saffir Simpson para los huracanes.
    ¿Ha sentido alguna vez un viento tan fuerte? Cuénteme su experiencia aquí 👇👇

  • @sainedjudger
    @sainedjudger Год назад +1109

    This is what my mom thinks will happen to the house if I don’t close the windows before leaving

    • @Ralphotron
      @Ralphotron Год назад +73

      why tf would you leave your windows open when you leave the house? 💀

    • @sainedjudger
      @sainedjudger Год назад +29

      @@Ralphotron so I can enter my room without going through any of those pesky doors 🚪

    • @-._.-Ghost-._.-
      @-._.-Ghost-._.- Год назад +28

      You should listen to your mum kid, she is longer on this world than you

    • @Ralphotron
      @Ralphotron Год назад +62

      @@sainedjudger yeah bro, keep doing that and you'll find another person in the room with you 💀

    • @nadarith1044
      @nadarith1044 Год назад +24

      I'm pretty sure your mom doesn't think of the wind, at all

  • @Spealer
    @Spealer Год назад +767

    This is great! Would love to see a large scale city or town version of this!

    • @NotAFoe
      @NotAFoe Год назад +17

      YOOOOO, my fav map creator!

    • @Spealer
      @Spealer Год назад +12

      @@NotAFoe Didn't expect someone to recognize me here lol, thank you :)

    • @Nazrininator
      @Nazrininator Год назад +3

      Love your maps!

    • @8jof544
      @8jof544 Год назад +8

      With things like wind turbines, sailing ships, big flags, flying helicopters, and big animals like elephants and cows

    • @mountainmonkey15
      @mountainmonkey15 Год назад +7

      And that would take a whole year to render

  • @dkzpower8452
    @dkzpower8452 Год назад +489

    It would be cool to see the wind of other planets.

    • @Flugmorph
      @Flugmorph Год назад +3

      which one

    • @viniciusdomenighi6439
      @viniciusdomenighi6439 Год назад +51

      @@Flugmorph uranus

    • @Flugmorph
      @Flugmorph Год назад +11

      @@viniciusdomenighi6439 lmao

    • @rsia08
      @rsia08 Год назад +15

      Yeah I think Neptune has 1000mph winds.

    • @JinZanmato
      @JinZanmato Год назад +14

      @@rsia08 HD189733b has 5400 mph winds! 😄

  • @Nekzuris
    @Nekzuris Год назад +181

    The start is off by at least 30km/h.
    I know wooden table don't move like that in 30km/h wind.
    Also the flag should be perfectly fine up to 90km/h.

    • @axhed
      @axhed Год назад +28

      yeah the flag getting ripped off at 30mph was a little sus. the waves and the beach were awesome though.

    • @buckykattnj
      @buckykattnj Год назад +18

      Hurricane Sandy made landfall over my house. Wind speeds for Sandy were fairly low... 80~90mph tops... My house lost a handful of shingles...but my roof was 50 years old and in need of replacement. Neighbors with fresh roofs didn't lose any. Shingles installed correctly are good for 100~110mph.

    • @tbeller80
      @tbeller80 Год назад +20

      Biggest thought was that was a weak BBQ grill to be swept away at 30mph

    • @Scourtsese
      @Scourtsese Год назад +5

      Yeah I used to live in Lethbridge, Alberta. That city received 90km/h winds somewhat commonly. At least two to three times a year. There were very little damages. You lost the odd shingle on the roof here and there but that's it.

    • @intermezzono1
      @intermezzono1 Год назад +6

      In my town im germany we oftem have gusts of 55 km/h and you can tell its a strong wind but we can still walk normally, its not like its pictured here

  • @bytesandbikes
    @bytesandbikes Год назад +69

    If half your roof is gone at 60mph, you need a new builder!

    • @dingbat19
      @dingbat19 11 месяцев назад +3

      Those are just the tiles.

    • @Godzilla_kingofthemonsters
      @Godzilla_kingofthemonsters 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@dingbat19 no the whole entire roof

    • @dingbat19
      @dingbat19 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@Godzilla_kingofthemonsters at 60 it was just tiles.

    • @cr33d4
      @cr33d4 3 месяца назад

      Right! That's a common spring wind here where I live.

  • @JohnCharb87
    @JohnCharb87 Год назад +113

    That was cool! I like how the music picks up with intensity when wind gets more powerful. Last Saturday the power of the wind knocked our power out for 5 hours.

    • @noelht1
      @noelht1 Год назад

      I’m thinking of Slash Ripping a killer guitar solo standing in the wind and rain!

    • @ymanafamily9570
      @ymanafamily9570 10 месяцев назад

      1 time we had 145 mph winds and power was still on

  • @stalkingtiger777
    @stalkingtiger777 Год назад +149

    Hello from Florida! Excellent animation as always.
    I don't think Tropical Storm winds are quite that damaging, at least not down here. Lots of downed branches, but very little roof damage, even with ceramic roof tiles.

    • @surfstarcc1
      @surfstarcc1 Год назад +13

      As a fellow Floridian I agree. The shingles usually stay on until you start getting into the 90-100mph range

    • @superiortoall22
      @superiortoall22 Год назад +11

      I agree; Oklahoma has some pretty strong winds sometimes in the 50-55 mph, it’s annoying for sure but usually no damage to the roofs

    • @demonqueen881
      @demonqueen881 Год назад +22

      Agreed, I think the video really overestimates the strength of wind, at least in the lower speeds. I don't think yard furniture would be blown to kingdom-come in 25-35 mph. And it'd take a lot more kick to start ripping off roof tiles.

    • @galliumgames3962
      @galliumgames3962 Год назад +10

      Most Florida buildings are built different. We got back to back 70 mph high end tropical storm conditions last year with minimal damages, whereas 70 mph winds back when I was in New England would do significant damage.

    • @AaronShenghao
      @AaronShenghao Год назад +1

      Probably showing an older style roof construction

  • @percyrobles8897
    @percyrobles8897 8 месяцев назад +6

    Here in Bolivia🇧🇴 Santa Cruz, winds like 0:58 are pretty common, 3 to 5 days of a week, with a top speed of 90kmh in worst cases. Causing many trees to fall and your house gets full of sand or debris

  • @Nazrininator
    @Nazrininator Год назад +47

    Whoa! This looks amazing and horrifying at the same time! Love the music that plays when the wind gets really intense! There’s so much attention to detail! Just wonderful!
    I’d like to see one for earthquakes next.

    • @MoultrieGeek
      @MoultrieGeek Год назад +1

      What would be amazing, his modeling skills are certainly up to the task.

    • @saschasagemann80
      @saschasagemann80 Год назад +1

      Earthquakes? 😶 I'd love to see MBS's Video of that! 🚔🚒🚑

    • @paulgibbon5991
      @paulgibbon5991 8 месяцев назад

      It would be fun if such a comparison started with the negative Richter scale, which includes such things as pressing a single key on a keyboard or dropping a feather to the ground.

  • @eeveestar6826
    @eeveestar6826 Год назад +13

    I love how when the Wind Level reaches 7, the person standing in the yard just goes "Fuck it" and decides to run away before the worst arrives.

  • @FranticForte
    @FranticForte Год назад +61

    Living in Florida and dealing with numerous hurricanes through my life, while the levels of destruction are right, the wind speeds in the video are too low for what’s happening destruction wise. Otherwise still a neat simulation!

    • @NephilimGodMusic
      @NephilimGodMusic Год назад +6

      Yup we got two Hurricanes back to back last year here in Orlando Fl.

    • @villebooks
      @villebooks Год назад +3

      The 'levels of destruction are right' but 'the wind speeds are too low for what's happening destruction-wise'?

    • @droe2570
      @droe2570 Год назад +9

      @@villebooks I think he means that hurricanes can cause that kind of destruction in general, but not at the wind speeds being shown in the video (like tree getting knocked over, etc.). I've lived through a bunch of hurricanes and never had any damage even remotely close to what is shown in the video, though it can happen. There are more factors at play than just wind.

    • @RaptorNX01
      @RaptorNX01 Год назад +2

      what can throw it off is pressure. if the house is intact thru higher speed, then suddenly a window breaks, it can rip the roof clean off. where as, if the window was broken sooner, it might have survived.

    • @beastmodestorm9822
      @beastmodestorm9822 8 месяцев назад

      I agree especially me being a southern country outlaw I witnessed severe weather tornadoes hurricanes all the time and the winds here are very low but I seen more accurate correct wind speed and gust but still a good video.

  • @MultiPurposeReviewer
    @MultiPurposeReviewer Год назад +11

    This is such a good video! The amount of detail is staggering. It took me a while to even notice that the waves were piling up more. Very well done.

  • @brynrivenes5080
    @brynrivenes5080 Год назад +16

    I'd love to see a tornado version! Maybe also a tornado size comparison?

  • @IBrokeMyFootOnAL3go
    @IBrokeMyFootOnAL3go Год назад +38

    Interesting and pretty good. You should do more of these like Tornadoes too.

    • @vercruyssesamuele7429
      @vercruyssesamuele7429 Год назад +1

      I just dreamt of a tornado. Just remembered how bad I feel with it 😅

  • @branden1010
    @branden1010 Год назад +13

    I am someone who lives in a place that regularly gets 60kmh and sometimes 80km/h. I can say that our houses are nowhere near falling apart at even 80km/h, I haven't lost even a shingle from it. From my own experience, this scale needs to be shifted by about 20km/h.

    • @taploko
      @taploko 5 месяцев назад +1

      It's cause places with higher wind levels use more money to attach the roof tiles to the house

    • @branden1010
      @branden1010 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@taploko it’s normal layered tiles and a nail gun. Just had my house built.

  • @AntonenBirten
    @AntonenBirten Год назад +7

    Hope runnig lady is OK
    At least wind would give her a quick ride to the destination she was going

  • @starsdagamer2666
    @starsdagamer2666 Год назад +8

    This is so cool to watch a comparison like this, you should do tornado winds next, it’d be epic to watch what like 300mph winds would do to a really well built structure just to get a sense for how insane they really are in nature

  • @dnj1369
    @dnj1369 Год назад

    This studio is top shelf!
    I'm always looking forward to new content. Great team!

  • @THETRIVIALTHINGS
    @THETRIVIALTHINGS Год назад +7

    Hurricanes are one of the nature's most terrifying nightmares.

  • @boinayel4409
    @boinayel4409 Год назад

    Thank you so much for including imperial measurements. I truly appreciate it!

  • @mr.brasskutt5385
    @mr.brasskutt5385 Год назад +8

    Un claro ejemplo de como un tranquilo día se puede convertir en un día complicado, después en un día en Guatemala y finalmente en un día en guatepeor. Agradecido desde ya por el video Maestro. ⛈👍

  • @jessetorres8738
    @jessetorres8738 Год назад +6

    By then end of the video I think it's safe to say that they aren't in Kansas anymore.

  • @D-Bri
    @D-Bri Год назад +7

    Hi MBS, would love to see a simulation of the world's largest explosions and their damage, in particular, Krakatoa, as I don't think people nowadays have any concept of just how loud that explosion was!

  • @tylercomeaux6136
    @tylercomeaux6136 Год назад +8

    Good vid but I dont think a mini BBQ pit is flipping over at 30 mph.

  • @elahprice3126
    @elahprice3126 Год назад

    The guitar for the wind ramping up was awesome! Then the music hit 🔥🔥🔥

  • @billvinsmoke3498
    @billvinsmoke3498 Год назад +1

    The sound effect is dope! 👍🔥

  • @susanmontgomery7121
    @susanmontgomery7121 Год назад

    Nice way to shake up the formula! Very well done.

  • @scratchpad7954
    @scratchpad7954 9 месяцев назад

    This simulation is an unmitigated chef's kiss. It not only shows the effect of the wind on land, but it shows how it affects the surface of water in coastal areas.

  • @freeduolingo2730
    @freeduolingo2730 Год назад

    I love this channel. The visuals and simulations are very interesting. My favorite was the “speed man made objects” video

  • @farzanazahir1332
    @farzanazahir1332 Год назад

    The amount of work you put into this is great

  • @2nd-place
    @2nd-place Год назад +7

    Not accurate at all. The worst part is when the heavy wooden table started blowing around at 20mph, lol.
    Meanwhile we had sustained winds the other week of 40mph with gusts to 60mph and my lawn furniture was barely displaced and we had no limbs down. We were under a high wind advisory which is fairly rare for our area, but we also get severe thunderstorms several times per year with winds of 70-80mph and you might have one tree down in an entire neighborhood.
    That cheap ass building in this video was losing shingles at 47mph lol I can’t even imagine how shoddy that is. The highest wind we’ve had at this house is 90mph rear flank downdraft when a tornado went by about a mile away and we lost zero shingles and had a few small to medium limbs down and the gliding/rocking bench on our deck blew from one side to the other and some of our small plastic children’s playsets blew over. Our neighbors’ trampoline flew away a few yards over though, lol.

  • @screamingmimi90
    @screamingmimi90 Год назад

    I love the channel! Warm wishes from Minnesota! ❤️❤️❤️

  • @TriniGamerGirl7
    @TriniGamerGirl7 Год назад +2

    Instantly clicked to watch this one as I got the notification!

  • @LeandroCarlosAbreu
    @LeandroCarlosAbreu Год назад +1

    Hello, I love the videos on your channel, and watching some of the perspectives and comparisons I came up with an idea that I would like to leave as a suggestion, a video from the perspective of the population of the main countries in the world if they were all gathered in the same place hahaha , it would be interesting to see the area that all these people would occupy, success to all of the MBS team

  • @hoper1294
    @hoper1294 Год назад

    I'm obsessed with your videos! So so cool!

  • @prestonik
    @prestonik Год назад

    Awesome as always! The more you know!

  • @Cyber_789
    @Cyber_789 Год назад +4

    Can you do Fictional islands size comparation please?

    • @Solarwhale32
      @Solarwhale32 Год назад +1

      if that happens, i want snaktooth island from bugsnax to be in it

  • @DreadEnder
    @DreadEnder Год назад

    This was an interesting one! Very different style from usual!

  • @surfstarcc1
    @surfstarcc1 Год назад

    I like how you included the waves and the storm surge.

  • @moogamooga2100
    @moogamooga2100 Год назад

    This was actually like super interesting. More of this!

  • @CronicasBunker
    @CronicasBunker Год назад +3

    Gracias Álvaro, brutal video, muy gráfico el poder de destrucción del viento, impresionante, un saludo!

  • @DDlambchop43
    @DDlambchop43 Год назад +1

    this is beautiful! We had high winds last month and it blew the cover off our house fan on the roof, which let rain into my bedroom. I think it got up to like 50-60 mph.

  • @gerardodiazcarrillo8639
    @gerardodiazcarrillo8639 Год назад +1

    Esto no me lo esperaba!!!! Si las comparativas en 3D ya son muy orientativas, este vídeo en movimiento más aún. Espero que no sea el último de este estilo. Puedo sugerir uno con la escala de terremotos?

  • @XXRedHeadedLassXX
    @XXRedHeadedLassXX 11 месяцев назад +1

    This looks so peaceful in the beginning but the constant reminder from the guitar saying “ Its about to get wild.” 😮😮😮😮😮😮🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸

  • @nerdsahhgaming4779
    @nerdsahhgaming4779 10 месяцев назад +1

    Here in Florida during Hurricane Ian that rolled through last year, in my area we got some Wind Gusts of around 110 MPH with an Average of around 95-100 MPH, we pulled through with no damage other than a bunch of Branches on our driveway.

  • @shifterzx
    @shifterzx Год назад +3

    I'd like to see you go all out and show us on a city wide scale the winds of Neptune!

  • @buzz.b
    @buzz.b Год назад +1

    This was a great addition to the repertoire. More simulations please.
    You could explore natural disasters like floods, or engineering such as with buildings or bridges in response to earthquakes. Even biological/epidemiological simulations such as visualising the spread of disease (like different viruses) in a population.

  • @Voldemorten83
    @Voldemorten83 Год назад +2

    It would be fun with more weather comparisons, maybe put registerd hurricanes up next to each other so we can see how wide an area they affect with increased wind strength and simulated damage?

  • @TheMandoman247
    @TheMandoman247 Год назад

    I’ve rode out winds of 75mph in my house in Wisconsin. The neighborhood was wrecked, no trees left. We sustained major roof damage, exactly how you showed!! Lol!! 😂 keep up the great vids !!!

  • @dimensionalanimations
    @dimensionalanimations Год назад +2

    Your animations are excellent!

  • @andrewg6964
    @andrewg6964 Год назад +1

    hi mbs, we love your videos. You should do a park size comparison that includes high park in toronto

  • @fuwto
    @fuwto Год назад +1

    This vid blew my mind !

  • @droxx78
    @droxx78 Год назад +3

    Cada vídeo nos demuestra lo buenos que son tus trabajos Álvaro.

    • @edward_9997
      @edward_9997 Год назад +2

      se llama Álvaro? 👀

    • @droxx78
      @droxx78 Год назад +2

      @@edward_9997 si....

  • @EXSF-1
    @EXSF-1 Год назад +1

    1:14 *"intense music start playing"*
    Me: oh no

  • @NanobanaKinako
    @NanobanaKinako Год назад +1

    The people inside the house didn't care about getting their table and chairs inside because they're too busy watching MetaBallStudios.

  • @MoultrieGeek
    @MoultrieGeek Год назад

    Awesome as usual! What a great way to show the destruction of high winds and hurricanes.

  • @drbendover7467
    @drbendover7467 Год назад

    Awesome videos, keep it up, dude:)

  • @OnlyBanzho
    @OnlyBanzho Год назад

    Take a break from this channel and comeback in a couple months! You’re mind is blown! MBS💯

  • @christianveits9857
    @christianveits9857 11 месяцев назад

    Your videos are better and better 😊

  • @orkako
    @orkako Год назад +5

    I remember when a hurricane once passed through my town with winds of 130 km/h and gusts of 185 km/h. Many historic trees and the entire city park suffered, but the buildings withstood the wind very well. In one building, a flat roof made of bitumenous material fell off. In 2 blocks, some polystyrene from the facade insulation fell off. And on one historic building a sculpture fell from the roof onto the street. Only a few houses in the City had a metal roof and none survived the hurricane. The old clay roof tiles were not damaged in any way. A few weeks later a slightly weaker hurricane passed through the USA and there the cities were completely destroyed. I was very surprised by this. Until now I wonder why in the USA in such endangered areas houses are built of wooden plywood instead of brick or Concrete masonry unit as in Europe. This would save costs for the Americans. After all, there are still houses in Europe that are 200, 300, 400 or 500 years old and are normally inhabited by people. I myself live in a building from 1898 and I don't consider it particularly old. There are houses in the city centre that date back to the early 16th century. They have survived wars, cataclysms and have served successive generations, who do not need to build new buildings, but only to renovate the existing ones and adapt them to changing building standards.

    • @stevenscott2136
      @stevenscott2136 Год назад +1

      We build badly in the US because of government and insurance companies. Builders and owners know that insurance and government pay-outs will repair the damage, so they build cheaply to save on costs.
      Insurance and government like to see a lot of damage, because it convinces people that they need to buy a lot of insurance and pay higher taxes for "storm protection".
      Most regular people are too stupid to realize that they're paying more in the long term, in taxes and insurance costs, than it would cost to just save that money and pay for their own damage if it happens, or use that money to build a genuinely solid house.

    • @orkako
      @orkako Год назад +1

      @Steven Scott Do Americans believe that this is a problem that needs to be urgently addressed, or do they simply accept that this is the reality? I ask this because, no empire is forever. After times of plenty comes crisis. The US has already had times of great abundance and now its abundance is falling all the time heralding a crisis. I do not mean an economic crisis that lasts a few years, but a decline in the position of the state in the world linked to social and economic decline. I am referring to a phenomenon that lasts for many generations. I do not know when the USA will experience such a crisis, but it will experience it one day, just as every older country has experienced it, and then the state will only be able to benefit from what was created in its heyday. A good example of such a phenomenon is modern Russia. They benefit from what was built during the time of Tsarist Russia and the USSR. Everything that was built permanently serves to this day. Not much new stuff is built because there is a lack of money and experts. This is what a real post-apocalypse looks like. It is very slow and unnoticeable, until one day people stop believing that the former glory years will return and then they begin to understand that their world ended a long time ago. I don't know when the US will experience this, whether in 100 years or 500 years, but they will experience it one day. At that point, sustainable housing, sustainable sanitation, sustainable field irrigation and sustainable roads will be the key. The real wealth are those things that will also serve our children even after we die. This is why I think that American drywall is a very big problem, but are Americans aware of how big a problem it is?

  • @Phicheee
    @Phicheee 8 месяцев назад

    Oh, that's humbling.

  • @Game-BeatX14
    @Game-BeatX14 Год назад +2

    Fun fact: The 1999 Bridge Creek-Moore tornado had recorded winds speeds of 301 mph. Pretty sure the house would get yeeted into outer space at that point.

  • @victornoel36
    @victornoel36 Год назад

    ¡Ahora haciendo simulaciones! Este canal está mejorando con cada video

  • @droe2570
    @droe2570 Год назад +12

    Fun to watch, but.... Having been in hurricanes a few times and had those kinds of winds hitting my house, I gotta say that the simulation is way, way off. I've never had a full sized tree get knocked over by a hurricane (it does happen, just has never happened to any of mine, only some smaller "baby" type trees, and they were just tilted over, not pulled from the ground or killed, just had to stand them back up and restructure the soil around their bases). I have lost roof tiles in every one of those hurricanes, but only a few.

    • @DrWhom
      @DrWhom 4 месяца назад

      a handful people die by tree fall during every storm; which means that from a personal point of view you can expect to live through thousands of storms without ever being near a large tree falling over; while at the same time it is a common occurrence at the whole-storm level

  •  Год назад +2

    Cool video.

  • @idkidk8278
    @idkidk8278 Год назад

    This is an awesome video! Bravo!!

  • @michaelmccauley139
    @michaelmccauley139 11 месяцев назад

    This is one of my favorite videos

  • @annatar6453
    @annatar6453 Год назад +1

    This was weirdly epic

  • @ZaGamerOG
    @ZaGamerOG 3 месяца назад

    It’s cool how you can see waves generating in the backround

  • @laurens6654
    @laurens6654 8 месяцев назад

    It would be interesting to see a version of this for tornadoes and/or derechos.

  • @dkbluemountain
    @dkbluemountain 11 месяцев назад

    This is like a ruler for measuring wind levels.

  • @El_Girasol_Fachero
    @El_Girasol_Fachero Год назад

    This channel is pure gold ❤️

  • @Bobby.B619
    @Bobby.B619 Год назад +1

    Great one mbs 😮😊

  • @brinaldi81
    @brinaldi81 Год назад

    Dayyum that wind level change is Fire

  • @RavinRay
    @RavinRay Год назад

    Super-typhoon Haiyan's winds were 300 km/h and beyond. It pushed the water way inland as a storm surge, and as someone who visited one of the devastated coastal cities here in the Philippines as part of a team that did post-disaster assessment, it was a harrowing sight.

  • @babalonkie
    @babalonkie Год назад +2

    Beautiful work.
    Hopefully... Tornado's is on the line up?

  • @pewlookalikeeverydayvideo7450
    @pewlookalikeeverydayvideo7450 Год назад

    this was amazing plz more

  • @carlosparedes4007
    @carlosparedes4007 Год назад

    Video genial Álvaro ❤

  • @madqtofficial3451
    @madqtofficial3451 9 месяцев назад

    Should do one with tornado winds it's honestly a lot more intense

  • @freddyd1783
    @freddyd1783 Год назад +3

    Meanwhile on Jupiter with those SUPERSONIC winds:

  • @darkshadowgamingii
    @darkshadowgamingii Год назад +1

    Thats a good representation the trees the house the waters the structures

  • @LoneWolfNYC
    @LoneWolfNYC Год назад

    I really enjoyed this one.

  • @BTUVM
    @BTUVM Год назад

    This blows me away!

  • @alexhurst3986
    @alexhurst3986 Год назад +1

    This is amazing. Do tornadoes next.

  • @paulferry7791
    @paulferry7791 Год назад

    Truly breathtaking...

  • @kellywilson8440
    @kellywilson8440 Год назад

    That was really cool !

  • @beastmodestorm9822
    @beastmodestorm9822 8 месяцев назад

    As a deep southern outlaw country guy, I know damn well these winds happen Alot more often more than you think.. especially during tornado season and hurricane season.
    Plus you mph is too low it should be much more higher because 40mph+ would do damage and the km/h is fine but much higher. Overall good video

  • @stevefox8605
    @stevefox8605 Год назад

    Excellent thank you 👍🏻

  • @miguelrey6498
    @miguelrey6498 Год назад

    Really good‼️👌🏼

  • @SpaceNavy90
    @SpaceNavy90 Год назад +3

    Scale seems a bit dramatized. Trees wouldn't blow over so easily at level 10

  • @FayeHunter
    @FayeHunter Год назад

    This really started slow and then became a 3 phase boss battle with that music

  • @florent1024
    @florent1024 Год назад +1

    Born in Réunion island, I remember when a category 5 cyclone went near the island. That was really scary 😱 Fortunately it never really approximated

  • @MrAlmarino
    @MrAlmarino Год назад +1

    Cada vez mejor este canal

  • @user-jt6dp1rb6e
    @user-jt6dp1rb6e Год назад

    Love this animations!!! 🤩🤩

  • @hajra8971
    @hajra8971 Год назад +1

    Proof that the cameraman never dies

  • @tieradlerch.217
    @tieradlerch.217 Год назад +1

    In my country, we have Neptune level wind last for 3 seconds once everytime there is rain weather

  • @TobiasDettinger
    @TobiasDettinger Год назад +2

    If a solid wooden table starts flying at 40 km/h, i would be flying in every storm we have here in europe and the storms are not strong here... Every 10 years or so we have an Orcan with about 130-150km/h.

  • @manibharathi293
    @manibharathi293 Год назад

    Fantastic work💯💯💯💯💯💯

  • @TonyTheYouTuba
    @TonyTheYouTuba Год назад

    Great work! You totally need to do the Richter earthquake scale too. Maybe you’re rendering it right now…