A category 4 hurricane is one with winds from 131 to 155 mph.
An F4 tornado is a tornado that levels most houses to the ground and strips the bark from trees. Estimated winds of 207 to 260 mph. Later adjusted to lower values of 166 to 200 mph on the Enhanced Fujita Scale
A little more than 1% of tornadoes are rated F4 and F5 with F5 tornadoes being less than 0.1%
Oklahoma has had the most F4 and F5 tornadoes. Though it is tied with Texas, Iowa, and Alabama in terms of F5 tornadoes in the past 60 years.
This would be the F3 button. You can push this any time that you need to replace your building block key.
The first category of a hurricane is category 1.
Category 4.
There is no given size for any category of tornado. Some F4 tornadoes have been relatively small while some have been over 2 miles wide
There is no such thing as an F4 hurricane. F4 is a rating applied to tornadoes. Initially winds for an F4 tornado were estimated at 207 to 261 mph. However, this has since been found to bee too high and adjusted to 166 to 200 mph for an EF4 tornado. A category 4 hurricane has sustained winds of 130 to 156 mph.
family sibling petition category is F4 F41 is the principal beneficiary (brother or sister of US citizen) F42 is the spouse F43 is for children
Yes. F4 is the second strongest category on the Fujita scale, indicating an extremely powerful tornado that can completely level well-built homes.
The F4 is the Fantastic Four!
f4. That's why it's marked f4
alt f4 alt f4
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Alt + F4 to close the active application window, or, if no window is open, shut down Windows
f4 means "the f**k"
An F4 tornado can be quite devastating. The typical damage indicator for an F4 tornado is well-constructed houses that are completely leveled. Even structures not impacted by the strongest winds of the tornado are likely to be severely damaged. Although it is not always the case, F4 tornadoes are often quite large, often over a quarter of a mile wide, with a fair number growing to over a mile across. This means that they can create large swaths of damage. In some cases entire towns may be destroyed. Although most tornadoes that go down in history are in the F5 category, a few F4 tornadoes have made the list as well.
Wichita Falls would be the answer, but the 1979 tornado was an F4, not an F5.