F4 and F5 are the two strongest categories of tornado on the Fujita scale. A damage based scale which rates tornadoes from F0 to F5.
An F4 tornado will reduce most houses to piles of rubble.
An F5 tornado will completely annihilate almost any house and wipe it clean off its foundation. Winds in an F5 can exceed 300 mph.
No. There has never been an F5 tornado recorded in Colorado. It has had a handful of F4 tornadoes.
An F4 or higher tornado (the only higher rating being F5) is classified as violent.
To date there have been no F5 tornadoes in the Freedom area since 1950. If you are referring to the 1984 tornado, it was an F4.
F4 and F5 are the two strongest categories of tornado on the Fujita Scale. The Fujita scale rates tornadoes from F0 to F5 by the severity of damage done. An F4 tornado will level most houses and strip the bark from trees. An F5 tornado, with winds than can exceed 300 mph, will completely annihilate a well built house and sweep it clean off its foundation. Cars and even houses can be thrown hundreds of feet.
Yes. Large F4 and F5 tornadoes have been known to destroy entire towns.
Yes. F4 is the second strongest category on the Fujita scale, indicating an extremely powerful tornado that can completely level well-built homes.
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.
There was an F5 that hit the Oklahoma city area in 1999, but it had weakened to F4 intensity by the time it hit Oklahoma city proper.
It is possible but quite unlikely. No F5 or EF5 tornado has ever been recorded in the State of New York, but there have been a few F4 tornadoes. One tornado in Massachusetts in 1953 was possibly an F5.
No. The highest rating a tornado can receive on the Fujita scale is F5. F4 is the second highest rating. Even then, while very strong tornadoes tend to be large, ratings are not based on size; they are based on the severity of damage the tornado inflicts.
No, Colorado has never recorded an F5 or EF5 tornado, the strongest was an F4. The largest tornado (by path width) on record in Colorado was rated EF3.
Although Florida has a very high concentration of tornadoes, they generally are not as strong or as destructive as the ones that occur in Tornado Alley. For example, since official records began in 1950 Florida has had 2 F4 tornadoes and no F5 tornadoes. By comparison Oklahoma has had 57 F4 tornadoes and 6 F5 tornadoes.