Category 4 winds are in the range of 130-156 mph. In other words, the hurricane regularly maintains such winds for periods upwards of a minute.
On the Saffir/Simpson scale a 4 is a major hurricane with 130-156 mph winds.
Hurricanes ranking a 4 on the Saffir-Simpson scale could take the majority of a roof off of a house. The wind velocity of a 4 hurricane is between 130-156 miles per hour. For more information on the Saffir-Simpson scale, hurricane wind velocity, or the potential damage that can be incurred in a hurricane, please see the related links.
Hurricane storms are in categories and typically follow the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale. The scale is as follows: Category 1 75 - 95 mph winds Category 2 96 - 110 mph winds Category 3 111 - 129 mph winds Category 4 130 - 156 mph winds Category 5 157+ mph winds
Hurricane Dora from earlier this year was a category 4 hurricane.
No. Hurricane Ike formed and dissipated in 2008, nearly 4 years ago.
On the Saffir/Simpson scale a 4 is a major hurricane with 130-156 mph winds.
If a hurricane is rated a category 4, that means it has maximum sustained winds in the range of 130-156 mph.
Yes. The last major hurricane was Hurricane Iniki, directly hitting the island of Kauai as a minimal category 4 on the Saffir-Simpson Scale.
Hurricanes ranking a 4 on the Saffir-Simpson scale could take the majority of a roof off of a house. The wind velocity of a 4 hurricane is between 130-156 miles per hour. For more information on the Saffir-Simpson scale, hurricane wind velocity, or the potential damage that can be incurred in a hurricane, please see the related links.
Hurricane Ike is a category 4 hurricane.
Hurricane storms are in categories and typically follow the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale. The scale is as follows: Category 1 75 - 95 mph winds Category 2 96 - 110 mph winds Category 3 111 - 129 mph winds Category 4 130 - 156 mph winds Category 5 157+ mph winds
Hurricane Dora from earlier this year was a category 4 hurricane.
Wind speed is the determining factor for the Saffir-Simpson rating (Category 1-5). This can be measure with an anemometer or estimated based on satellite imagery. Another measure of intensity is barometric pressure, which is measure with a barometer.
Dennis was a category 4 hurricane.
category 4
Hurricane Fabian was actually in 2003. It was a category 4 hurricane.
The Saffir-Simpson scale is a scale that rates hurricanes based on maximum sustained wind speeds, it has 5 categories of hurricanes and 2 additional categories weaker than a hurricane. these are the categories wind maximum sustained winds: Sub-hurricane: Tropical depression: under 39 mph. Tropical storm: 39-73 mph Hurricane: Category 1: 74-95 mph Category 2: 96-110 mph Major hurricane: Category 3: 111-130 mph Category 4: 131-155 mph Category 5: over 155 mph.