The minimum wind speed for a typhoon is 74 miles per hour, and that is a sustained wind speed. Typhoons have been recorded with sustained winds approaching 200 miles per hour.
75-100mph
74
The wind speed of a Typhoon Ambo was 90 mph.
About 250km/h
Typhoons are rated on the Saffir-Simpson scale by the Joint Typhoon Warning center. By those standards the highest category is category 5 (winds over 156 mph). Other agencies do not use the scale, and classify the strongest typhoons as super typhoons (winds over 150 mph), which are equivalent to a strong category 4 or 5 on the Saffir-Simpson scale. In terms of pressure, the most intense typhoon on record was Typhoon Tip (1979), with a miniumum pressure of 870 millibars, the lowest sea-level pressure on record. In terms of wind speed, Typhoon Haiyan (2013) was the most intense, with sustained winds of 195 mph.
The minimum wind speed for a storm to be called a hurricane is 74 mph.
The Wind speed was 102 mph i know this becuse i did a reading packit about it
The wind speed of a Typhoon Ambo was 90 mph.
A storm must have sustained winds of at least 74 mph to be considered a typhoon.
Typhoon winds are the same as hurricane winds: 74 mph or higher.
it was the super typhoon pongsona on December 8 2002. it ended at December 11 2002. the wind speed was 110 mph. it was the biggest typhoon Guam had ever had. the damagecosted more then any other typhoon in Guam. this typhoon hit the micronesia,Korea and part of japan.
The maximum speed of a Eurofighter EF2000 Typhoon fighter is Mach 2 (1550 mph).
To be considered a hurricane a tropical storm must produces sustained winds of at least 74 mph. The highest reliably recorded sustained winds in a tropical cyclone (hurricane or typhoon) were 195 mph. Gusts have been measured to 253 mph.
has a wind speed that has 300 kph? is called TYPHOON
A stock GMC Typhoon is governed by the ECU and will not exceed 124 MPH.
About 250km/h
21/64
The 1937 Great Hong Kong Typhoon--- Observatory instruments of registering up to 125mph broke down. By the way, the first T10 typhoon signal was hoisted in 13 years today. Highest wind speed recorded was in Ngong Ping, 142kph (89 mph)
Typhoons are rated on the Saffir-Simpson scale by the Joint Typhoon Warning center. By those standards the highest category is category 5 (winds over 156 mph). Other agencies do not use the scale, and classify the strongest typhoons as super typhoons (winds over 150 mph), which are equivalent to a strong category 4 or 5 on the Saffir-Simpson scale. In terms of pressure, the most intense typhoon on record was Typhoon Tip (1979), with a miniumum pressure of 870 millibars, the lowest sea-level pressure on record. In terms of wind speed, Typhoon Haiyan (2013) was the most intense, with sustained winds of 195 mph.