Yes. Hurricanes, tornadoes, and sometimes severe thunderstorms can produce 100 mph winds, which can cause severe damage. Sometimes winds may be much faster. Tornadic winds have been clocked at over 300 mph.
To be considered a blizzard a storm must produce sustained winds or frequent gusts to at least 35 miles per hour for a period of at least three hours. Wind speeds in the neighborhood of 100 miles per hour have been observed in some blizzards.
Many thunderstorms produce very little wind, and wind speeds in most thunderstorms do not exceed 40 mild per hour. In rare cases, though, thunderstorms may produce winds to well over 100 milers per hour.
measure how fast the wheel turns per second, 1 sec. per turn equals about 25 miles an hour and 100 miles an hour is 0.28 sec.
It was 100 MPH It was 100 MPH
Well according to FerrariF50man's Experiment on Youtube ''Does a sneeze travel at 70mph?''The answer is basically 'no' because the sneeze power out of your nose feels like it travel fast but it really travels at about 23mph / 30kph! :)A sneeze can basically travel at the speed of 23 miles per an hour.WELL...According to Myth Busters it's 39 MPHit is 165km per hour
The wind speed of hurricane Grace when it was at sea maxed out at 100 miles per hour. The storm was short-lived and hit land in October 1991.
Err, 100 miles per hour!
At what ever speed the wind direction is going. It can range from 0 to 100. If it goes over 100 MPH then it will create a sand storm.
It depends on the speed. At 10 miles per hour 100 miles is 10 hours. At 100 miles an hour it is 1 hour. At 1000 miles an hour it is 0.1 hour (= 6 minutes).
Ground speed is of more concern to a passenger. If you have an air speed of 100 miles per hour and you're flying into a 100-mile-per-hour head wind, you're standing still with respect to the ground.
wind speeds over 74 miles per hour are possible. in a hurricane winds can get up to 100 miles an hour!
Rate is units divided by time. For instance, speed is a rate. If you're driving, moving at 100 miles per hour (100 miles / hour ) then 100 mph is your rate of speed.
In Hurricane Katrina, winds got as high as 175 miles per hour. It caused over 100 billion dollars in damage.
100 kilometers per hour is equal to 62 miles per hour
20 miles per hour.
A 10.49-second 100-meter dash equates to an average speed of 21.32 miles per hour.
100 miles per hour at least