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What do you even do to get away from shit like that? It would go right through the plywood roof's that are common all over the US. I guess you hope you have a basement you can shelter in while the house is ripped apart.

Archive: https://archive.today/JUYIC

From the post:

>A Texas tornado produced massive spiked hailstones that were bigger than the size of a pineapple, according to stunning new images taken by locals. Val Castor, a storm chaser with NEWS 9 in Oklahoma City, posted photos on Facebook that showed the giant hail chunks he found after a tornado passed through the Texas Panhandle.
Castor said he found the impressive icy stone three miles north of Vigo Park.

What do you even do to get away from shit like that? It would go right through the plywood roof's that are common all over the US. I guess you hope you have a basement you can shelter in while the house is ripped apart. Archive: https://archive.today/JUYIC From the post: >>A Texas tornado produced massive spiked hailstones that were bigger than the size of a pineapple, according to stunning new images taken by locals. Val Castor, a storm chaser with NEWS 9 in Oklahoma City, posted photos on Facebook that showed the giant hail chunks he found after a tornado passed through the Texas Panhandle. Castor said he found the impressive icy stone three miles north of Vigo Park.

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt

I helped a buddy install a metal roof recently, instead of regular shingles. His roof has a 50 year warranty. I don't think even his roof could stand up to pineapple sized chunks of ice falling from the height of clouds.

[–] 0 pt

triple layered with some stone or Kevlar blocks or something?

[–] 0 pt

Nope. Just the metal shingles on top of the plywood with the plastic barrier for extra moisture protection.