Category 1 contains procedures and/or services identified by 5 digit codes.
The first category of a hurricane is category 1.
A category 1 hurricane is the weakest category of hurricane, with wind from 74 mph to 95 mph
If you mean category, Sandy peaked at Category 2 with 110 mph winds and made 3 landfalls. 1 as a Tropical Storm (Jamaica) 1 as a category 2 (Cuba) and 1 as a category 1 (New Jersey, USA)
Currently Tomas is a category 1 hurricane, though earlier it was a category 2.
A category 5 hurricane is stronger in terms of wind speeds compared to a category 1 hurricane. Category 5 hurricanes have sustained wind speeds of 157 mph or higher, while category 1 hurricanes have sustained wind speeds of 74-95 mph.
The first category of a hurricane is category 1.
Category 1 Category 2 Category 3
It was a category 1 hurricane.
A category 1 hurricane is the weakest category of hurricane, with wind from 74 mph to 95 mph
Hurricane categories range from category 1 to category 5.
If you mean category, Sandy peaked at Category 2 with 110 mph winds and made 3 landfalls. 1 as a Tropical Storm (Jamaica) 1 as a category 2 (Cuba) and 1 as a category 1 (New Jersey, USA)
Cat or category Category 1 to 5 Category 5 is the highest
Currently Tomas is a category 1 hurricane, though earlier it was a category 2.
A category 5 hurricane is stronger in terms of wind speeds compared to a category 1 hurricane. Category 5 hurricanes have sustained wind speeds of 157 mph or higher, while category 1 hurricanes have sustained wind speeds of 74-95 mph.
Hurricane Chris was a category 1 storm.
Hurricane Hanna is categorized as a Category 1 hurricane, which means it has sustained winds of 74-95 mph.
There were 8 Atlantic hurricanes in 2000 of which 4 peaked at category 1 strength.