There is no set forward speed. But the winds of an EF5 tornado are in excess of 200 mph, with some potentially exceeding 300 mph.
There is no set upper limit for an EF5 tornado. Any tornado with estimated winds in excess of 200 mph is considered an EF5.
No. Florida has never recorded an F5 or EF5 tornado.
No, fortunately I have not seen an EF5 tornado, that is in real life So, Yeah
No. EF5 is the strongest tornado on the Enhanced Fujita and therefore the most dangerous type.
The one EF5 tornado in Oklahoma in 2011 occurred on May 24.
No, but it is given a rating based on the EF scale which ranges from EF0-EF5. EF0- Weakest tornado. EF5- Most violent tornado.
The Greensburg tornado was an EF5, the strongest category of tornado.
The Joplin, Missouri tornado of 2011 had a damage path of 22 miles.
No, the maximum rating is EF5. The primary factor in rating a tornado is damage, and since EF5 damage is total destruction there is no room for a higher category. Also, there is no upper bound for EF5 winds; any tornado with estimated winds over 200 mph is an EF5.
The rarest tornado rating is F5 or EF5.
No. The highest rating a tornado can get is F5 or EF5.
No, Colorado has never recorded an F5 or EF5 tornado, the strongest was an F4. The largest tornado (by path width) on record in Colorado was rated EF3.