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[email protected][_2_] trader4@optonline.net[_2_] is offline
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Default Reinforce Roof Against Falling Trees?

On May 22, 1:09*pm, "Robert Green" wrote:
wrote in message

stuff snipped

Florida just bumped up the wind code requirement in this area to 170
MPH. That certainly starts getting you up into the F-3 tornado
category.
The connector requirements tie the roof, all the way down to the
foundation as a continuous system.


Sadly, even after several serious tornadoes, places in "tornado alley" like
Moore have done very little to make local houses more tornado resistant:

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/22/us...ts-resisted-in...

Construction standards in Moore have been studied extensively. In a 2002
study published in the journal of the American Meteorological Society,
Timothy P. Marshal, an engineer in Dallas, suggested that "the quality of
new home construction generally was no better than homes built prior to the
tornado" in 1999.
Few homes built in the town after the storm were secured to their
foundations with bolted plates, which greatly increase resistance to storms;
instead, most were secured with the same kinds of nails and pins that failed
in 1999. Just 6 of 40 new homes had closet-size safe rooms.

I have less sympathy now for the Okies that get blown clean to Oz. *At least
the ones that rejected calls for improved building codes based on claims
"it's too expensive" to build a basement. *Yet the Feds (you and me and our
tax dollars) are expected to help rebuild areas affected by tornadoes and
hurricanes. *How about not giving any disaster funds for rebuilds that DON'T
include basements?


Why is it that you libs immediately want the heavy hand
of govt to come cracking down on those that lost their
homes? Looking at the total devastation, it's not clear
that a basement would have made much difference.
In fact, apparently 7 children drowned in the school basement. Oh,
and contrary to the sensational headline,
the NY Times article actually says that half of the rebuilt
homes do have storm shelters.



What would it really cost if a large township got together and decided to
help underwrite the cost of installing small pre-fab shelters in cities and
towns along Tornado Alley?


And how exactly are all the people going to get to these
shelters in the ten minutes or so that they have?




*Sounds like the readiest "shovel ready" project
around.


Sounds of the libs licking their chops over another
govt spending boondoggle. The govt is already broke.




*Tornado shelters are mass-produced in a pre-fab format that just
drops into a 10 by 10 by 10 hole. *It seems like Californians and
earthquakes, mid-westerners are equally ambivalent about their local menace,
tornadoes.

--

Bobby G.


And in a free country, I say that is there right. If they want
to buy one of those shelters, leave them free to choose.