TornadoVideos.net is the home of the most extreme storm chasers in the world, and is the premiere source of professional extreme weather photography and news for production companies, media, and weather enthusiasts. Our team of storm chasers has documented over 200 tornadoes over the last 10 years, as well as several hurricanes (including Katrina from ground zero), blizzards and floods. Our goal is to capture the most extreme video possible of intense natural disasters, and to share this video with the rest of the world. Check out TornadoVideos.net for our state-of-the-art live gps tracker, stock footage gallery, storm chase summaries, and breaking news blog. Stay tuned as our daring storm chasers travel the world documenting the most dangerous weather phenomena on the planet.
TornadoVideos.net heads to New York City with the Dominator. Taxis tried to cut us off, but quickly realized that was not a good idea! Check out the Dominator intercepting tornadoes on Discovery Channel's Storm Chasers, Sundays at 10 pm eastern.
yt.www.watch.player.write("watch-player-div", false, null, null, "100%", "100%"); Video of the TornadoVideos.net Dominator getting stuck in a ditch while pounded by 80 mph wind-driven hail up to baseball size in the core of the Goshen County, Wyoming tornadic supercell on June 5, 2009. Check out all the action on Storm Chasers this fall on Discovery Channel.
Incredible video from inside the large Kirksville, Missouri tornado on May 13, 2009! The first ever radar deployment INSIDE a tornado! TornadoVideos.net deployed the SRV inside the circulation on the northwest side of Kirksville. For the most extreme action from this chase, check out Storm Chasers on Discovery Channel this fall!
Extreme Tornado Tours intercepted this LP tornado warned supercell south of Pierre, SD in Tripp County, SD. A damage path with snapped power poles was encountered along the ND/SD Border to the south. Check out TornadoVideos.net for more extreme weather video.
Installation of the Close Range Vertical Radar on TornadoVideos.net's storm chasing vehicle at Radiance Technologies in Oxford, MS. This radar is designed to measure the horizontal and vertical winds inside a tornado. The first intercept with CLOVER was the Kirksville, MO tornado on May 13, 2009. You can see this chase on Discovery Channel's Storm Chasers this Fall.
Exclusive bubble cam footage from the near tornado intercept on April 29, 2009 in the Texas Panhandle from the Dominator. The bubble cam is an HD camcorder protected in a bullet-proof lexan bubble. It provides a unique perspective of the tornadoes intercepted by the Dominator. For more extreme videos check out TornadoVideos.net
Extreme footage from the bubblecam on top of the Dominator, as a strong tornado passed in front of the vehicle near Macksville, KS on June 15, 2009, changed directions to the southwest, forcing us to back up and nearly get hit by the large cone. Check out TornadoVideos.net for more extreme tornado footage, and Discovery Channel's Storm Chasers starting October 18, 2009, 10 pm eastern
Video from the first full day of the TornadoVideos.net - Radiance Technologies tornado field project. Two funnels were documented from a wall cloud, vertical velocities were scanned under a rotating wall cloud with the SRV radar, and aerial data and video was collected east of the wall cloud with the RC plane.
Video of the first two tornadoes produced by the monster supercell west of Aurora and Grand Island, NE. The TornadoVideos.net SRV Dominator tried to intercept these two tornadoes, but they were very short-lived. The main tornado intercept west of Aurora is on the Part 2 highlight video for June 17, 2009. For more insane tornado footage, check out TornadoVideos.net, and watch Storm Chasers on Discovery Channel this Fall for the whole story.
INSANE video from inside the powerful Aurora, Nebraska tornado on June 17, 2009. The tornado intensified right on top of the TornadoVideos.net SRV Dominator, and the window was blown out as an intense mini suction vortex passed over the vehicle. A 138.8 mph wind gust was measured by the roof anemometer as the window blow out. Check out Storm Chasers on Discovery Channel this Fall for the video of the glass slamming into our faces.