A 200 mph wind is at the extreme upper end of the wind estimate range for an EF4 tornado.
On the Ehnahnced Fujita scale, 200 mph is a borderline EF4/EF5 tornado.
200 mile per hour = 200 x 5280 feet per hour = 1,056,000 feet per 3600 seconds = 293.33 feet per second
(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.
There is no set upper limit for an EF5 tornado. Any tornado with estimated winds in excess of 200 mph is considered an EF5.
(200 mile)/(45 mile/hr) = 4.4444 hours = 4 hours & 26.6667 minutes
There is no such thing as an E4 tornado. An EF4 tornado has peak estimated winds of 166-200 mph. In some cases, however a tornado rated EF4 may have been capable of producing EF5 damage (winds over 200 mph) but did not impact any structures that culd yield an EF5 rating.
The average tornado has a height of about 660 feet (200 meters), although they can range in height from tens of feet to over a mile depending on the strength and intensity of the tornado.
Answer: 200 kmph is 124 mph. 124 mph - the conversion is 1kph = 0.62 mph So - 200 kph * 0.62 = 124 mph If you wanted to find out kph in mph, you would do the inverse. So 120 mph / 0.62 = 200 km /h
If you mean a tornado with 30 mph winds, then no. It probably wouldn't even be considered a tornado. A 30 mph wind would move or overturn a few light objects that aren't tied down and maybe break off a few loose twigs from trees. If you mean a tornado traveling at 30 mph, then yes. The forward traveling speed of a tornado does not correspond to its wind speed. A tornado moving at 30 mph could still pack winds over 200 mph and perhaps over 300 mph. A tornado with such winds could destroy entire neighborhoods fairly easily.
well if your going 200 mph id say you would make 200 miles in about an hour.
In excess of 200 mph at the peak, possibly as high as 250 mph.