Even if the whole house is destroyed you still can survive if you are in your basement or storm cellar.
Yes. It matters on the strength of a tornado though. It would usually takes at least an EF3 tornado to do this.
When a tornado destroys a house it can rupture gas lines, which is a fire hazard. When a tornado takes down power lines it create sparks, another fire hazard.
Stronger ones can. Depending on how well built the house is it usually takes at least an EF2 or EF3 tornado. An EF5 tornado can completely obliterate even the strongest of houses.
It usually takes at least an F4 tornado to flatten houses.
It depends on how strong the tornado is. A sod house could probably survive a hit from a weak tornado, but probably nothing stronger than an EF1 or EF2.
Yes. It matters on the strength of a tornado though. It would usually takes at least an EF3 tornado to do this.
Yes, a house can be completely swept off its foundation by an EF4 or EF5 tornado depending on how well built it is.
When a tornado destroys a house it can rupture gas lines, which is a fire hazard. When a tornado takes down power lines it create sparks, another fire hazard.
House Tornado was created in 1988.
No house can offer 100% protection from a tornado. The best option is a house with a basement to go to in case of a tornado.
Yes. Tornadoes have been known to lift houses into the air. It usually takes a very strong tornado to do so, generally of F4 or F5 intensity.
The house is invading the tornado's natural habitat, so of course the tornado will fight to keep its territory.
Stronger ones can. Depending on how well built the house is it usually takes at least an EF2 or EF3 tornado. An EF5 tornado can completely obliterate even the strongest of houses.
The safest place to be in your house during a tornado is in the basement.
A tornado can hit a house, but cannot happen indoors.
The safest place to be in your house during a tornado is in the basement.
yes their is tornado all over the whole word.