A wind of force 12 on the Beaufort scale (equal to or exceeding 64 knots or 74 mph).
Winds in Hurricane Wilma peaked at 185 mph.
75-200mph
90
It is usually very slow but it can be fast in the case of a natural disaster like a flood, tornado, hurricane or earthquake.
; Category One Hurricane: Winds 74-95 mph; Category Two Hurricane: Winds 96-110 mph; Category Three Hurricane: Winds 111-130 mph; Category Four Hurricane: Winds 131-155 mph; Category Five Hurricane: Winds greater than 155 mph
The average forward speed of a hurricane is 10-15 mph
As fast as a hurricane with no doubt
The categorization of hurricanes is not based on how fast they travel, but on how fast the sustained winds within a hurricane move at their fastest. A category 5 hurricane has winds of 156 mph or greater.
The minimum wind speed for a hurricane is 74 mph.
Winds in Hurricane Wilma peaked at 185 mph.
The winds of a hurricane must be at least 119 km/h.
The Hurricane could fly at about 340 mph.
75-200mph
Hurricane Charley peaked as a strong category 4 hurricane with sustained winds of 150 mph.
Hurricane Katrina had peak winds of 175 mph.
Hurricane Katrina comes at about 1000 miles per hour.
There is no such thing category 6 hurricane. Any hurricane with winds over 155 mph is a category 5.