Yes. They often do.
it mostly can go straight in any path it takes
Bus
If you mean the longest lasting tornado, the duration was 3 hours and 29 minutes. This was the infamous Tri-State tornado of 1925. It also holds the record for longest damage path (219 miles), fastest forward speed (73 mph), and highest death toll (695) of any U.S. tornado.
Not really, if you're referring to heat transfer, then the heat will use the path of least resistance. So the heat doesn't rely on the path as much as it does on the material that the heat must travel through.
It is difficult to attack an unpredictable opponent.
it is unpredictable to tell what a tornado's path will be it could be coming right towards you then out of no where turn
it mostly can go straight in any path it takes
It varies. A typical tornado might travel about 5 kilometers. However, many tornadoes have path lengths of less than a kilometer. In rare cases a tornado may have a path lengths of 200 kilometers or more. The longest path ever recorded for a tornado was 352 kilometers.
The known path length of the Goliad tornado was about 15 miles. The path may have been longer, though, as little is known about what the tornado did prior to hitting Goliad.
Not usually. The median tornado path length is about 1 mile, and only a small percentage travel more than 20 miles. However, a number of tornadoes have been recorded with path lengths well over 100 miles.
No. A tornado's path is virtually unpredicatable.
Yes, a tornado can wreak everything in its path.
The shortest tornado path on record was 7 feet long.
The longest tornado path ever recorded was 219 miles long.
The longest tornado damage path on record is 219 miles.
A tornado's path is narrow and usually relatively straight.
The average tornado has a path length of 2 to 3 miles.