On the Ehnahnced Fujita scale, 200 mph is a borderline EF4/EF5 tornado.
A 200 mph wind is at the extreme upper end of the wind estimate range for an EF4 tornado.
on coastline they erode beaches and in land they flood with whats known as a storm surge and depending on the category they start at 75 mile per hour windspeed and a category 5 is capable of up to 200 mile per hour winds one has never been recorded at this speed but its believed the early 1900s hurricane of galveston was exceeding 200 mile per hour winds.
There is no such thing as a category 5 tornado. Category 5 is a rating on the Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale. The highest rating for a tornado is EF5 on the Enhanced Fujita scale, which has estimated peak wind speeds of greater than 200 miles per hour. Winds may exceed 300 miles per hour. This is not the same as travel speed. The speed at which a tornado travels is unrelated to its rating. A typical tornado travels at about 30 miles per hour, but may be stationary or move faster than 70 miles per hour. A category 5 hurricane has sustained winds of at least 157 miles per hour. A typical hurricane travels at 10 to 25 miles per hour.
The highest category tornado is a F5 or EF5
On May 20th, 2013, a tornado began in the town of Newcastle. The tornado was over a mile wide, and was on the ground for 39 minutes. It covered 17 miles, including a highly populated section of the town of Moore. 24 people were killed, and over 350 were injured. The tornado carried winds of over 200 miles per hour, ranking the tornado as a category F5 storm. The damages wrought by the storm are estimated to be between $1.5 million and $1 billion.
200 mile per hour = 200 x 5280 feet per hour = 1,056,000 feet per 3600 seconds = 293.33 feet per second
The Joplin, Missouri tornado of 2011 was rated EF5, the highest level of tornado on the Enhanced Fujita scale with winds in excess of 200 mph.
(23.1807 mile)/hour
In terms of duration a strong tornado typically lasts at least 20 minutes, and may last for over an hour. In terms of path length, most will travel at least 10 or 20 miles. Size is variable, but strong tornadoes are often 200 yards to at least 1/4 mile wide, wit some exceeding a mile.
A F6 tornado does not exist on the Enhanced Fujita scale, which ranges from F0 to F5. The most powerful tornado category, an F5 tornado, has wind speeds exceeding 200 mph and can cause catastrophic damage.
(200 mile)/(45 mile/hr) = 4.4444 hours = 4 hours & 26.6667 minutes
There is no such thing as an E4 tornado. You most likely mean an EF4 tornado. The estimated winds for an EF4 tornado are 166-200 mph. That is equivalent to a category 5 hurricane (winds 156 mph or greater).