No.
The highest category possible is F5.
No, there has never been an F6 tornado and never will be.
The Fujita Scale rates tornadoes based on damage and F5 damage is complete destruction.
There is no such thing as an F6 tornado. The highest rating a tornado can be assigned is F5. Even if a tornado were to occur with winds in the supposed F6 range, damage would be no different from that of an F5 as all virtually structures would be obliterated anyway.
No. The very first Fujita scale included an F6 but the categorization was never used - F5 is the highest a tornado can be.
Yes. Wolcott was hit by an F1 tornado on July 3, 1996.
There is no such thing as an F6 as damage maxes out at F5. F5 damage consists of the complete destruction of nearly all structures. Well-constructed houses are wiped clean off their foundations.
Sort of. On the original Fujita scale theoretical categories F6 to F12 were plotted, but they are never used, as ratings are based on damaged, and an F5 tornado leaves nothing left to destroy. Since it was never used, the Enhanced Fujita (EF) scale did away with it completely, giving any tornado with estimated winds over 200 mph a rating of EF5.
There has never been an F6 tornado. F0 is the most common type.
There is no such thing as an F6 tornado.
No. The Fujita (F) scale uses damage to rate tornadoes and F5 damage is total destruction, leaving no room for a higher category. So the F6 tornado is a purely theoretical idea.
No. The Tri-State tornado was an F5. There is no such thing as an F6 tornado.
Theoretical winds for an F6 tornado are 319-379 mph. However, because tornado ratings are based on damage, the highest a tornado could ever be rated is F5. So the F6 rating is purely theoretical with no applications in the real world. On the enhanced scale there is no EF6 level theoretical or otherwise.
well im sorry but there is no such thing as a F6 F5 is the highest tornado rating
There is no such thing as an F6 tornado. The highest rating a tornado can be assigned is F5. Even if a tornado were to occur with winds in the supposed F6 range, damage would be no different from that of an F5 as all virtually structures would be obliterated anyway.
No. The highest rating a tornado can attain is F5.
No. An F5 is the strongest tornado that is able to form.
No. No tornado stronger than F5 has ever been recorded.
No. The very first Fujita scale included an F6 but the categorization was never used - F5 is the highest a tornado can be.
No. The highest rating a tornado can acheive is F5.