Category 1 hurricane wind range form 74 to 95 mph.
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.
A category 1 hurricane is the weakest category of hurricane, with wind from 74 mph to 95 mph
There were 8 Atlantic hurricanes in 2000 of which 4 peaked at category 1 strength.
Cyclones of the southern hemisphere are measured by wind speed and assigned a category number. Whether or not they are classified as a cyclone is also determined by barometric pressure. Wind speeds determine the category as follows: Category 1: winds up to 125km/h Category 2: 125- 170 km/h Category 3: 170 - 225 km/h Category 4: 225 - 280 km/h Category 5: in excess of 280 km/h Hurricanes, which are cyclones in the north-western hemisphere, are measured on the Saffir-Simpson scale. The categories are measured as follows: Tropical Storm - Winds 39-73 mph Category 1 Hurricane - winds 74-95 mph Category 2 Hurricane - winds 96-110 mph Category 3 Hurricane - winds 111-130 mph Category 4 Hurricane - winds 131-155 mph Category 5 Hurricane - winds 156 mph and up
A category 5 hurricane has stronger winds at 157 mph or greater. Category 1 winds, by contrast, are 74-95 mph.
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.
The Saffir-Simpson scale, that uses wind speed to determine the type (category 1, Category 2, etc.) Category 1 has the lowest winds and Category 5 hast the highest winds.
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
You rate a hurricane by the intencity of the winds. This is measured in category (CAT). CAT 1 is a hurricane with winds of 74-95 mph CAT 2-Winds of 96-110 Cat 3-Winds of 111-130 Cat 4-Winds of 131-155 Cat 5-Winds of 155+ Although you think CAT 5 must be catastrophic, and CAT 1 must be nothing, Then think again! Take this example-Katrina was only a CAT 3, but it damaged levees which in turn flooded New Orleans.
They are measured on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale, which rates category strength based on wind speed from category 1 to 5 (the highest winds being a category 5).
A category 1 hurricane is the weakest category of hurricane, with wind from 74 mph to 95 mph
There were 8 Atlantic hurricanes in 2000 of which 4 peaked at category 1 strength.
Cyclones of the southern hemisphere are measured by wind speed and assigned a category number. Whether or not they are classified as a cyclone is also determined by barometric pressure. Wind speeds determine the category as follows: Category 1: winds up to 125km/h Category 2: 125- 170 km/h Category 3: 170 - 225 km/h Category 4: 225 - 280 km/h Category 5: in excess of 280 km/h Hurricanes, which are cyclones in the north-western hemisphere, are measured on the Saffir-Simpson scale. The categories are measured as follows: Tropical Storm - Winds 39-73 mph Category 1 Hurricane - winds 74-95 mph Category 2 Hurricane - winds 96-110 mph Category 3 Hurricane - winds 111-130 mph Category 4 Hurricane - winds 131-155 mph Category 5 Hurricane - winds 156 mph and up
A category 5 hurricane has stronger winds at 157 mph or greater. Category 1 winds, by contrast, are 74-95 mph.
The lowest category on the Saffir-Simpson scale is the Category 1 with sustained winds of: 74-95 mph 64-82 kt 119-153 km/h Of course you can get gusts higher than that during the hurricane. Tropical storms may have gusts reaching that range but if they are not sustained winds, it doesn't get promoted to the category of a hurricane. Note that hurricanes are defined not only by windspeed but also as part of tropical cyclone weather system. Category 2 hurricanes are sustained winds of: 96-110 mph 83-95 kt 154-177 km/h Category 3 hurricanes are sustained winds of: 111-129 mph 96-112 kt 178-208 km/h Category 4 hurricanes are sustained winds of: 130-156 mph 113-136 kt 209-251 km/h Category 5 hurricanes are sustained winds of: 157 mph or higher 137 kt or higher 252 km/h or higher Since CAT 5 has no upper limit for wind speed there is no such thing as a CAT 6 or higher.
There are 5 categories from category 1 to category 5.There are 5 categories for hurricanes, 1-5 based on winds speeds and an additional 2 categories (tropical depression and tropical storm) for tropical cyclones below hurricane strength.
No. Category 1 is the weakest category of hurricane. In most cases category 5 hurricanes are the worst. However, some pf the impacts of a hurricane do not necessarily depend on the storm's category.