yes
I'm sure as you know, EF5 tornadoes are the strongest most dangerous tornadoes on the Earth. EF5 tornadoes can blow away a house in a couple seconds and the damage from an EF5 can be pretty horrifying. The only thing left after a tornado, like that, goes by would just be the foundation so that's is pretty bad. Look up tornadoes on Wikipedia and you will see pictures from what the different tornadoes could do
The powerful winds insider a tornado can damage or destroy homes and buildings. As buildings come apart potentially deadly debris goes airborne.
Tornadoes vary greatly in intensity and there is in fact a scale that uses the severity of damage to determine intensity. Winds can range anywhere from 65 mph to over 300 mph. Most tornadoes are rated EF0, with estimated winds of 65 to 85 mph. These tornadoes cause some damage to roofs, gutters, and siding, as well as breaking tree limbs and toppling weakly-rooted trees. Somewhat fewer tornadoes are rated EF1, with estimated winds of 86 to 110 mph. These tornadoes can badly damage roofs, flip over trailers, and break windows. Stronger tornadoes are rated EF2, with estimated winds of 111 to 135 mph. These tornadoes tear the roofs from houses, completely destroy trailers and lift cars off the ground. A small percentage of tornadoes are rated EF3, with estimated winds of 136 to 165 mph. These tornadoes tear down the walls of houses, and uproot most trees, reducing the largest branches to stubs. About 1% of tornadoes are rated EF4, with estimated winds of 166 to 200 mph. These tornadoes level houses, leaving piles of debris, strip the bark from trees and can even damage road surfaces. Less that 0.1% of tornadoes are rated EF5 with winds of over 200 mph, sometimes exceeding 300mph. These tornadoes can destroy almost anything. Well-built houses are torn clean off their foundations. Even two tornadoes of the same rating can cause different amounts of damage, depending on how much of the path experiences the strongest winds. Additionally tornadoes vary in size and how far they travel. A large, and long lived tornado is going to affect a much larger area than a brief, small tornado and probably cause more damage. Where they occur also affects the damage. A tornado that goes over open farmland will cause more damage than one that goes through a city or town.
Tornadoes damage in the United States on the Enhanced Fujita Scale, which goes from EF0 at the weakest to EF5 at the strongest. Prior to that, U.S. tornadoes were rated on the Fujita scale, which similarly ranges from F0 to F5. Some countries, such as Canada, still use the original Fujita scale. Some European countries rate tornado damage on the TORRO scale, which ranges from T0 to T11, where the categories T10 and T11 corresponding to an F5 or EF5 tornado.
Many types of equipment are covered by the manufacturer’s warranty so seek advice from your supplier. Beyond that, you have the effect of repairs and maintenance and also to keep your equipment in good condition and insured whatsoever occasions.
Yes. If it goes into a body of water it becomes a water spout.
Yes. Tornadoes very often rip up vegetation. Even a relatively weak tornado can topple hundreds of trees if it goes through a wooded area.
life goes by too fast
a lam goes very fast, faster than you not very fast it goes fast enough
No. The highest category possible is F5.
fast
Damage from a tornado is typically measured using the Enhanced Fujita (EF) scale, which ranges from EF0 (weakest) to EF5 (strongest). This scale assesses tornado damage based on the estimated wind speeds and resultant destruction.