The very strongest of tornadoes have winds over 300mph (480 km/h).
As with hurricanes the strongest winds are generally on the right side of a tornado.
Tornadoes. Peak tornado winds are estimated at over 300 mph. The strongest hurricane winds are about 200 mph.
It varies widely. The weakest have winds of about 65 mph, while the strongest have winds over 300 mph.
around a tornado
It depends on the tornado. If it is a single vortex tornado the winds near at the edge of the core will be the fastest. However, many of the strongest tornadoes are multivortex, meaning that they have smaller vorticies (almost like mini tornadoes) inside the main vortex. In a multivortex tornado the fastest winds are within these subvortices.
Both are, but it is probably more likely with a tornado.
tornado alley
Winds inside a tornado can range from 65mph to over 300 mph. Most tornadoes have winds less than 110 mph. The ones that cause major damage are usually in the strongest 5% with estimated winds over 135 mph.
The main part of the circulation of a tornado when the strongest winds occur is called the core.
It depends on the tornado. In most tornadoes the strongest winds are near the center. In multivortex tornadoes, however, the strongest winds are in the subvorticies, which are almost like smaller tornadoes within a larger one.
The very strongest of tornadoes (those rated EF5) have the strongest winds of any storm on Earth. But compared to other storms tornadoes are fairly small, rarely over a mile wide.
The fastest winds on earth occur in tornadoes. In extreme cases they can exceed 300 mph.