It depends. Some are worse than others. A tornado may be given a rating of EF2 based solely on damage to trees and power lines. In this case some places may lose power and some roads may be blocked, but most would consider this an inconvenience rather than a disaster.
However, an EF2 tornado can also completely destroy mobile homes and other weak structures and badly damage stronger ones. An EF2 that strikes a trailer park may kill multiple people and leave many more homeless. In such cases the tornado could be considered a disaster.
An EF2 tornado is considered to be a significant tornado with wind speeds between 111-135 mph. It can cause considerable damage to buildings and vegetation, overturn vehicles, and pose a threat to human life. Preparedness and quick response are crucial in minimizing the impact of an EF2 tornado.
Hammon was hit by an EF2 tornado on March 8, 2010.
The "E" in EF2 tornado stands for Enhanced Fujita Scale, a classification system used to measure tornado intensity based on the damage they cause. The EF scale ranges from EF0 (weakest) to EF5 (strongest).
Technically, yes. EF0 is the weakest, EF1 the second weakest, and EF2 the third weakest. However, Some meterologists consider EF2 and stronger tornadoes as strong, as only about 10% of tornadoes are rated EF2 or higher.
A strong tornado is one that is EF2 or stronger. A violent tornado is one that is EF4 or EF5.
As of May 2, 2015 the last tornado in Wichita was an EF3 on April 14, 2012. Additionally, an EF2 on May 19, 2013 an EF2 tornado dissipated just before it would have entered Wichita.
An EF2 tornado is considered the beginning of a strong or significant tornado. An EF2 tornado has estimated winds of 111-135 mph. These winds can tear roofs from well built houses, snap large trees, toss cars, and completely obliterate mobile homes. While tornadoes of this strength do not usually kill they are still very dangerous.
Most likely yes. EF2 tornadoes have lifted larger objects than that.
A tornado with estimated winds of 120 mph would be rated EF2.
If the tornado is strong enough, yes. It would normally take at least an EF2 tornado to lift a truck.
A tornado is both. A calamity is a disaster. A tornado is a disaster that occurs naturally, and would thus be consideted a natural calamity or natural disaster.
An F2 tornado does not have any particular size. That is not how the scale works; it rates tornadoes based on damage. An F2 tornado (EF2 as of February 2007) is a tornado that tears roofs from well-built homes, derails trains, and destroys trailers. Winds in an EF2 are estimated at 111 to 135 mph.