Much more.
Typical F1 damage includes badly damage roofs, trailers overturned or partially destroyed, broken windows and collapsed porches. F1 tornadoes often cause damage in the tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars, occasionally in the millions.
Typical F5 damage includes well constructed houses wiped clean off their foundations and reinforced concrete structures heavily damaged. They can even peel asphalt from roads. F5 tornadoes often cause damage in the tens or hundreds of millions of dollars. A few have even caused over $1 billion in damage.
Typical F1 tornado damage surfaces peeled from roofs, windows broken, garages and porches collapsed, trailers overturned or severely damage, and trees knocked down.
The stronger a tornado the more energy it takes and most storms do not have the energy to produce a tornado stronger than F1 or are not organized enough to focus that energy into a tornado. Additionally, tornado ratings are based on damage and some tornadoes stay in open fields, causing no damage. Such tornadoes are rated F0.
An F1 tornado can break windows, strip the surface from a roof and heavily damage a mobile home. Barns will likely be destroyed. Poorly secured roofs may be torn off.
In most cases an F1 tornado does not have that much energy and soon runs out and is more easily disrupted, though a few F1 tornadoes have had long damage paths. By contrast an F5 tornado will generally have several orders of magnitude more energy to release. Additionally, such a strong tornado could be considered more robust. A shift in the parent storm that might cut can F1 tornado's lifespan and thus damage path short, while the same shift might only weaken an F5 tornado somewhat.
F1 damage is generally describes as moderate. Typical F1 damage includes broken windows, severely stripped roofs, badly damaged or mostly destroyed trailers, and collapsed garages and porches.
An F1 tornado will severely strip material from the roofs of most buildings. Trailers can be overturned and badly damage and some may be destroyed. Windows can break, garages and porches can collapse and windows can break.
No. An F0 tornado is simple a weak tornado, or one that does little to no damage. A gustnado is a vortex that resembles a tornado that forms in the outflow boundary of a severe thunderstorm. Gustnadoes can occasionally cause damage comparable to an F0 or F1 tornado, but they are not considered tornadoes.
Typical damage from an F1 tornado includes badly damage roofs, overturned or partially destroyed trailers, and broken windows.
A tornado earns an F1 or EF1 rating if it causes moderate damage. This may include badly damaged roofs on houses, broken windows, snapped trees, and trailers overturned or partially destroyed.
In most cases an F5 tornado will be larger than an F1. However, tornado ratings are a measure of the strength of a tornado, not its size. F5 is the strongest category, and such tornadoes are usually very large, but a few have been fairly small. Conversely, F1 is the second lowest rating (F0 is the lowest) and such tornadoes are generally small, but some have been huge.
F1 tornadoes can kill, but they rarely do. So an F1 tornado is unlikely to kill you, but you should still take safety precautions to reduce your risk, especially since you can't tell how strong a tornado is before it hits.
An F1 is a moderate tornado having wind speeds of 117-181 km/h (73-112 mph). It may cause moderate damage, peeling off roofing, pushing mobile homes off their foundations, and pushing moving automobiles off the road.