No. That would be a category 5 hurricane.
Category 1 (the lowest) for a hurricane is winds of 74-95 miles an hour.
If you are asking about a "category 5" hurricane classification the winds need to be 157 miles per hour or faster.
111 to 130 miles per hour
The difference in maximum sustained wind speeds between a category 1 and category 2 hurricane is 15-25 mph. Category 1 hurricanes have maximum sustained winds of 74-95 mph, while category 2 hurricanes have maximum sustained winds of 96-110 mph.
74 mile per hour winds are hurricane force winds which is category 1
Category 1 (the lowest) for a hurricane is winds of 74-95 miles an hour.
A category 5 hurricane has sustained winds of at least157 miles per hour.
If you are asking about a "category 5" hurricane classification the winds need to be 157 miles per hour or faster.
111 to 130 miles per hour
The difference in maximum sustained wind speeds between a category 1 and category 2 hurricane is 15-25 mph. Category 1 hurricanes have maximum sustained winds of 74-95 mph, while category 2 hurricanes have maximum sustained winds of 96-110 mph.
74 mile per hour winds are hurricane force winds which is category 1
A speed of 93 miles per hour has no significance in tropical systems. At 74 miles per hour a tropical storm becomes a category 1 hurricane. At 96 miles per hour a hurricane is considered to be a category 2.
A hurricane with 135 mph winds would be a category 4.
Hurricane Nicole in 1998 was a category 1 hurricane. It formed on November the 24th and dissipated on December 1, 1998. Its top winds reached 85 miles an hour and did not affect any land. Hurricane Nicole in 2016 was a category 4 hurricane with peak sustained winds of 130 mph. It struck Bermuda while at category 3 intensity.
Hurricane Andrew had peaks sustained winds of 175 miles per hour, which had weakened to 165 miles per hour by the time of landfall in Florida.
By definition it is a hurricane. A hurricane is a tropical cyclone with winds of 74 mph or more.
Hurricane force winds are 74 mph or greater.