I actually swam under a supercell in August of 2014 and all I needed was a new pair of shorts after looking directly above me and seeing a rapidly rotating wall cloud 😂
All Loud Thunder In Timestamp 0:02 (Loudest & Brutal Thunder Ever) 0:28 0:55 (ShortestThunder Ever On This Video) 1:01 (Loudest Thunder Ever On This Video) 1:17 (Longest Thunder Ever On This Video) 1:50
@@jezcolborne6329 These strikes are more likely to be "high-amp" negatives. Positive strikes don't produce the crackling sound at the beginning of the thunderclap, which is the sound negative leaders make. But since positive lightning doesn't branch near the ground, the first thing you hear would be the return stroke, which usually sounds like a gunshot or cannon fire.
@@jezcolborne6329Typically with negative strikes, you get a bolt with a quick and rapidly flashing duration, a long crackle and then a boom or a fading crackle. With positive strikes, you get one longer and brighter flash with a loud zap sound, kind of like an electric fly zapper but way louder, seconds of waiting and then it sounds like a cannon went off right next to you. Those in the video are more powerful negative strikes (high amp).