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.
tornadoes can be stationary, or travel in excess of 65 miles per hour. It all depends on how fast the parent storm is moving.
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.
The speed of lightning is approximately 220,000 miles per hour, or 360,000 kilometers per hour. This makes it one of the fastest natural phenomena on Earth, along with the speed of sound and the speed of a tornado. Lightning is much faster than the speed of sound, which is about 767 miles per hour, but slower than the speed of light, which is about 670,616,629 miles per hour.
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.
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.
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.
No, the fastest winds in a tornado every recorded was 301mph. that was the Oklahoma tornado of 1999
The 2011 Joplin tornado had peak winds estimated at 225-250 mph (362-402 km/h).
127.38109440865345 Miles per Hour
216,000 miles per hour.
About 5.6 miles per hour.
70 miles per second is 252,000 miles per hour.
One km per hour is equal to 0.6214 miles per hour.
228 meters per hour = 0.14 miles per hour.
About 3.4 miles per hour.
14.96 miles per hour.