Winds a-blowin' and the temp feels great.
Yep. I think I'm about to get worked across three cities. It was a pretty wide hail swath for this area.JobSecurity said:
Got some bigguns in Katy
JobSecurity said:
Got some bigguns in Katy
Jason_InfinityRoofer said:Yep. I think I'm about to get worked across three cities. It was a pretty wide hail swath for this area.JobSecurity said:
Got some bigguns in Katy
Probably going to hit you up. house is in the orange and really close to the red spot on that map.Jason_InfinityRoofer said:Yep. I think I'm about to get worked across three cities. It was a pretty wide hail swath for this area.JobSecurity said:
Got some bigguns in Katy
Jason_InfinityRoofer said:
Yeah, we have to pay for access to them. They have to be used in conjunction with real time reports. For me, I use them for generalization and then talk to customers in real life and look at the roof to validate them. Some of my customers with the worst damage are in areas that are in the fringes of those maps. The noob roofers will chase those hotspots which can be good but sometimes not. Either way, someone is going to annoy you because of then. That's kind of why I mostly switched to referral systems instead. But I digress….
I am not aware of any free services for this however, here are some good and often better options:
1. If you have an area you want a map on, shoot me an email and I'll grab it and send it to you.
2. RadarScope is an app for weather that often integrates mPING reports from folks like me…
3. mPING app allows users like you and Me to send real time actual reports of what we see with weather and uses our phone location to tag so, if I was at Lowe's and you were at kohls across the street we could each send our eyewitness hail size estimate in.
The second two options are free, and I THINK the free RadarScope option will overlay that stuff.
My maps are validated with real time data if it's available but often it's based on an algorithm that determines size from radar signatures.
The image is RadarScope. I pay for a step above free on this but the free one might give you this, I'm not sure though. The circles are all real time human provided hail reports. So, if I click on one, it will tell me the size reported. That data is from mPING.
That was probably more info than you wanted but that's just what I do.
Yes. It warrants inspection. But, be prepared for the result of that inspection. Shoot me an email and I can talk to you more about it. If I have a few Texags folks that need inspections, I'll make a day or two of it. I have project managers there, but for my Texags folks, I personally prefer to handle everything. We are based in Houston off of Groeschke Road. Local.JobSecurity said:
Yeah that looks pretty accurate based on what I've heard from friends and neighbors. I was in the orange. We didn't have a ton that were that big, maybe 10-15, and the rest were smaller.
Are a handful of hits from hail that big enough to warrant a roof inspection? Should I talk to insurance first or just have somebody take a look
is this a good storm to get insurance involved in for a new roof? asking for a friendJason_InfinityRoofer said:
Sounds good.
Well...maybe. Just because ice fell out of the sky doesn't mean the roof is necessarily destroyed enough to get insurance involved. That's why I inspect the roof.A is A said:is this a good storm to get insurance involved in for a new roof? asking for a friendJason_InfinityRoofer said:
Sounds good.
cryption said:
Travis Herzog was saying like 6" for most of the city depending where the front tomorrow lines up. Locally 12" possible
AgLiving06 said:cryption said:
Travis Herzog was saying like 6" for most of the city depending where the front tomorrow lines up. Locally 12" possible
I stopped following Travis because he tends to be to doom and gloom. As we saw today, he was off a significant amount.
https://mrms.nssl.noaa.gov/qvs/product_viewer/WhataMaroon88 said:
Hey bro where do you access these maps? I've been looking for a public site with this.
The D said:
I was flying into bush tonight and got a video of lightning destroying something. These are screen caps
Pretty damn cool shots. I was in Tinseltown off 290 with my brother watching "Air" around that time and it sounded like WWIII outside for pretty much the entire second half of the movie.The D said:
I was flying into bush tonight and got a video of lightning destroying something. These are screen caps