Wind Damage
Posted: Thu Dec 07, 2000 2:12 am
What, if any, conclusive studies have been conducted on wind damage on mobile homes? Links would be great. Modern technology combined with modern apathy indicates that a single or double-wide would be at least as safe as a modern frame house on a concrete slab (said house running around 125,000). The variance comes into play when the dynamics of avaition are considered: Wind provides lift. (Actually "air" provides the lift)
A "tied-down" double-wide with skirting can survive most of the scaps with straight-line winds, and can even nod at a glancing blow from an F0 (F-Zero on the Fujitsu Scale) tornado.
My concern rises in the fact that rapidly moving air has a tendancy to propel material (such as a leaf), by providing force below the material providing uplift. The material in question has a tendancy to flutter about for a bit before "crashing" down. Of course, each and every plane that lands, regardless of size, is performing a "controlled crash".
See my concerns? What precautions can be taken to avoid such calamities?
A "tied-down" double-wide with skirting can survive most of the scaps with straight-line winds, and can even nod at a glancing blow from an F0 (F-Zero on the Fujitsu Scale) tornado.
My concern rises in the fact that rapidly moving air has a tendancy to propel material (such as a leaf), by providing force below the material providing uplift. The material in question has a tendancy to flutter about for a bit before "crashing" down. Of course, each and every plane that lands, regardless of size, is performing a "controlled crash".
See my concerns? What precautions can be taken to avoid such calamities?