Potentially, as the ground level wind speed does not say anything about the potential for a tornado to form. However, you still need to have the right condition brewing up in the storm clouds for one to form.
The average tornado moves at about 30 miles per hour.
F1 winds speeds are 71-112 miles per hour.
72.4 kph
An average tornado would probably be in the mid EF1 range with peak winds of 90 to 100 miles per hour. The tornadoes that make national news are usually much stronger.
A slow-moving tornado tornado might travel at 10 mph, but a vortex with 10 mph winds would by no means be considered a tornado. The winds must be strong enough to produce damage.
Direction
Yes. A tornado is very powerful and dangerous, a tornado is very similar to a twister. It consists of winds traveling up to 300 miles per hour, some tornado's winds even travel faster.
You are traveling two miles per hour.
1 hour. You can go 80 miles in an hour. Hence Miles Per Hour or MPH.... If you were traveling at 45 Miles Per Hour, that means In 1 Hour you cover 45 Miles
The Tri-State Tornado of March 18, 1925 claimed the most lives of any single tornado, killing 689 people in 3½ hours on its 219-mile long track. This tornado also was the third-fastest tornado on record, traveling at nearly 60 miles per hour.
60 miles
an hour and one minute
Mh stands for "miles an hour." So a plane traveling mh370 would be traveling 370 miles in an hour.
If you are traveling 2 miles an hour, then 1 hour.
32 miles per hour.
60 miles per hour.
The average tornado moves at about 30 miles per hour.