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No. 155 mph is close to the upper limit of category 4. Category 4 winds are in the range of 130 to 156 mph. Anything higher is a category 5.
No. That would be a category 5 hurricane.
Yes, category 4 hurricanes can indeed have sustained winds exceeding 155 miles per hour. The scale used to categorize hurricanes, the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale, designates category 4 hurricanes as having wind speeds between 130 and 156 miles per hour. These storms are extremely dangerous and can cause catastrophic damage.
First, F1 is not a category used to classify hurricanes, it is used to classify tornadoes. You probably mean a category 1 hurricane. The farthest inland a hurricane has maintained hurricane strength was nearly 200 miles.
A Cat.5 has minimum sustained winds of 155 mph. Some hurricanes, such as Hurricane Camille have had sustained winds of 190 and possibly even 200 mph. Wind gusts to well over 200 mph have bee recorded.
No. 155 mph is close to the upper limit of category 4. Category 4 winds are in the range of 130 to 156 mph. Anything higher is a category 5.
No. That would be a category 5 hurricane.
Yes, category 4 hurricanes can indeed have sustained winds exceeding 155 miles per hour. The scale used to categorize hurricanes, the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale, designates category 4 hurricanes as having wind speeds between 130 and 156 miles per hour. These storms are extremely dangerous and can cause catastrophic damage.
Hurricanes wind speeds are measured up by Categories on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale (SSHS). The highest, a Category 5 Hurricane, is for substain winds reaching 155 MPH or higher. Hurricane Camile had speeds of over 210 mph. Keep in mind we don't exactly know the limit of how strong a hurricane can get.
There have been tornadoes in Madagascar that have caused serious damage. A tropical storm that originates over the Indian Ocean and winds get to 74 miles per hour are called cyclones. Hurricanes form over the Atlantic Ocean. Typhoons form over the Pacific Ocean.
First, F1 is not a category used to classify hurricanes, it is used to classify tornadoes. You probably mean a category 1 hurricane. The farthest inland a hurricane has maintained hurricane strength was nearly 200 miles.
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your driving at 30 miles per hour over the speed limit.
If your car won't drive over 5 miles an hour, it needs to be repaired.
Just over an hour and a half.
The Saffir-Simpson Scale rates hurricanes from category 1 to category 5 bases on wind speed. Category 1: 74-95 mph Category 2: 96-110 mph Category 3: 111-130 mph Category 4: 131-155 mph Category 5: over 155 mph
Every animal that can run over four miles an hour top speed can also run four miles an hour.