Strong winds alone cannot create a tornado. Tornadoes need a specific setup of air movement within a thunderstorm in order to develop. That said, one component believed to play a key role in tornado formation is something called a rear-flank downdraft, or RFD. Winds from the RFD can reach or exceed 80 mph.
In terms of tornadoes themselves, 80 mph would be near the upper end of the estimated wind range of an EF0 tornado (65-85 mph).
F1 winds speeds are 71-112 miles per hour.
An average tornado would probably be in the mid EF1 range with peak winds of 90 to 100 miles per hour. The tornadoes that make national news are usually much stronger.
No, tornadoes typically form from thunderstorms with wind speeds of 40 miles per hour or higher. A 10-mile-an-hour wind speed is too weak to generate the necessary conditions for a tornado to develop.
Thunderstorm winds can reach speeds of 60-100 mph, known as straight-line winds or downdrafts, without the presence of a tornado. These winds can cause significant damage and are often associated with severe thunderstorms.
The weakest wind speed of a tornado is typically around 65 miles per hour (105 kilometers per hour), which is considered an EF0 tornado on the Enhanced Fujita scale. These tornadoes are the least destructive and usually result in minor damage.
F1 winds speeds are 71-112 miles per hour.
No, the fastest winds in a tornado every recorded was 301mph. that was the Oklahoma tornado of 1999
Yes. A tornado is very powerful and dangerous, a tornado is very similar to a twister. It consists of winds traveling up to 300 miles per hour, some tornado's winds even travel faster.
a tornado
In rare cases the winds in a tornado may exceed 300 miles per hour, though only small portions of the path would be affected by such extreme winds. The wind in most tornadoes will not be over 100 miles per hour.
An average tornado would probably be in the mid EF1 range with peak winds of 90 to 100 miles per hour. The tornadoes that make national news are usually much stronger.
No, tornadoes typically form from thunderstorms with wind speeds of 40 miles per hour or higher. A 10-mile-an-hour wind speed is too weak to generate the necessary conditions for a tornado to develop.
There is no such thing as a category 5 tornado. Category 5 is a rating on the Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale. The highest rating for a tornado is EF5 on the Enhanced Fujita scale, which has estimated peak wind speeds of greater than 200 miles per hour. Winds may exceed 300 miles per hour. This is not the same as travel speed. The speed at which a tornado travels is unrelated to its rating. A typical tornado travels at about 30 miles per hour, but may be stationary or move faster than 70 miles per hour. A category 5 hurricane has sustained winds of at least 157 miles per hour. A typical hurricane travels at 10 to 25 miles per hour.
A tornado is wind. Even a relatively weak tornado will produce stronger winds than you would encounter under normal circumstances. Winds in the strongest tornadoes may exceed 300 miles per hour, a speed no other storm on Earth can match. That said, most tornadoes are not that strong; winds in the vast majority are less than 150 miles per hour. Hurricanes and even some severe thunderstorms can produce winds that exceed those of a moderate tornado.
A typical tornado likely has peak winds in the range of 70-100 miles per hour, capable of causing EF0 to EF1 damage. The tornadoes that cause major damage usually have peak winds of at least 140 miles per hour and are in the strongest 5% of tornadoes.
The 2011 Joplin tornado had peak winds estimated at 225-250 mph (362-402 km/h).
Thunderstorm winds can reach speeds of 60-100 mph, known as straight-line winds or downdrafts, without the presence of a tornado. These winds can cause significant damage and are often associated with severe thunderstorms.