In a strong typhoon or hurricane the winds can carry enough force to directly damage or destroy the roofs and walls of houses. Whether the windows are open or closed will make no difference in a situation like this. The storm surge of a typhoon carries even more force than the wind.
During sandstorms, the wind will pick up particles of dust that is loose and can be blown for thousands of miles. The visibility during a sandstorm can be zero.
Approximately half of all tropical storms reach hurricane/typhoon strength. Whether a storm will intensify to such a level depends on what conditions it encounters. In some cases the water is not warm enough, dry air is present, or wind shear is too strong, all of which can limit a storm's strength. Sometimes a storm encounters such conditions or hits land before it has a chance to strengthen.
Blown over, blown down, yes, but not blown away.
Alderran. oh wait... it got blown up. never mind.
During Cyclone Tracy, the wind speed device recorded up to about 217km/h before the building was blown away.
yes if its stuck closed.
Some dust can get blown in through open windows and doors, but even if these are closed, lots of "dust" will be produced by cells being exfoliated from the residents' skins.
there are no windows no it was blown up
Not during violent storms. In a violent storm, such as a severe thunderstorm, tornado, or hurricane, you should stay away from windows. It is possible in high winds for blown objects to crash through windows, breaking them. The flying glass can cause severe injuries.
Blown fuse.
Check for blown fuse
Blown fuse? bad ignition switch?
If none of them work it is more than likely a blown fuse.
The motor is probably damaged or the fuse is blown that powers the power windows.
If none of them work then the fuse is more than likely blown.
blown fuse in the fusebox.
Blown fuse in the fusebox.