According to the Beaufort scale it would be a strong gale.
I have 4 that are doing just fine at age 65 The elderly woman we bought the farm from 5 years ago planted them as a young bride. They have stood up to 75 mph winds several times since we have been here and many many times to 45-50 mph winds with no broken branches. This is in western Nebraska panhandle. It is a great tree for this area.
50 kilometers per hour is 31.07 miles per hour.
27.96 mph
50 Km/h =31.06 Mph
a hurricane occures
Yes; winds of 50 MPH will cause it to sway up to three inches.
Winds of 50 MPH will cause it to sway up to 3 inches.
A tornado can have winds of 74 mph. However, what you are probably thinking of a hurricane, as part of the definition of a hurricane involves winds of 74 mph or greater.
Yes, Neptune has the strongest winds in the solar system. Neptune's winds range from about 500 mph to about 1,300 mph. The maximum winds in a tornado are about 300 mph. Most tornadoes have winds under 90 mph.
Winds range from 65 mph to over 300 mph. Winds over 200 mph are very rare. Most tornadoes have winds within the range of 65-85 mph.
no it needs to be about 75-85 mph and over for windows to break...big windows break faster than smaller windows.
It varies widely. The weakest have winds of about 65 mph, while the strongest have winds over 300 mph.
If you mean Katrina peak winds were 175 mph. If you mean Katia peak winds were 135 mph.
; Category One Hurricane: Winds 74-95 mph; Category Two Hurricane: Winds 96-110 mph; Category Three Hurricane: Winds 111-130 mph; Category Four Hurricane: Winds 131-155 mph; Category Five Hurricane: Winds greater than 155 mph
A hurricane with sustained winds of 122 mph would be a category 3.
Winds in a hurricane must be at least 74 mph. Winds near 200 mph have been observed.
No, tornadoes can produce winds faster than in any hurricane. There is actually a substantial amount of overlap between hurricane and tornado winds. Winds for an EF0 tornado start at 65 mph and winds in the strongest tornadoes have been recorded at 302 mph. Hurricane force winds start at 74 mph. Hurricanes have had sustained winds as fast as 190 mph with gusts recorded up to 253 mph.