No. The highest rating a tornado can get is F5 or EF5.
The Greensburg tornado was an EF5, the strongest category of tornado.
The Waco tornado of 1953 was an F5.
The highest category tornado is a F5 or EF5
EF5, Enhanced Fujita scale category 5.
The tornado generally describes as incredible is the F5 category.
The Waco, Texas tornado of May 11, 1953 was rated F5.
The deadliest category of tornado is F5. They have the highest death rate per storm.
The F5 (or EF5 as of February 2007) tornado is the most damaging category.
An F5 Tornado is the most powerful category of tornado possible. This tornado pulls well-built homes off their foundations and into the air before shredding them and wiping the foundation clean.
On the Ehnahnced Fujita scale, 200 mph is a borderline EF4/EF5 tornado.
There is no such thing as a "cyclone 5 tornado." You can have a category 5 hurricane or an EF5 tornado. In either case, the answer would be no; there is too much turbulence.
There were many tornadoes in Oklahoma that day, but the infamous Oklahoma City tornado was an F5.