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Could a tornado have 400 mph winds?

By the Fujita Scale, a 400 mph tornado would be just under F8. The highest on that scale that has happened so far is F5. I don't think that physics would all that to happen on Earth in the present conditions.
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Can a tornado have 500 mph winds?

The wind speed within the funnel cloud has been estimated at between 100 and 500 mph. Roughly two percent of all tornadoes are "violent" tornadoes, with wind speeds of 300 mph or more, an average path width of 425 yards, and an average path length of 26 miles.
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What is the max wind speed of a tornado?

It is generally believed that tornadic wind speeds can be as high as 300 mph in the most violent tornadoes.
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What is the strongest wind ever in tornado?

The strongest wind speed

Despite this, on 3 May 1999, a tornado in Oklahoma was measured to reach 302 mph, the highest winds ever found on the Earth's surface. The most violent tornadoes have never been captured.
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What is the strongest tornado possible?

The scale ranks tornadoes from F0 to F5, with F0 being the least intense and F5 being the most intense. F5 tornadoes were estimated to have had maximum winds between 261 mph (420 km/h) and 318 mph (512 km/h). F5 damage in Bridge Creek, Oklahoma, from the May 3, 1999, tornado.
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Is The EF Scale Outdated?

Could there be an F6 tornado?

Basically, the reason why it is not possible is because it is not an existing designation. The Fujita scale only goes to 5. That doesn't mean that tornadoes can't far exceed that threshold, but those that do are still F5, not F6, because there is no end to F5.
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Has there ever been a F7 tornado?

Well, as others have said, there is no such thing as an F7 tornado since the scale, for all practical purposes, only goes up to F5. But the other issue is that tornadoes are not rated based on their appearance, nor is appearance necessarily a good indicator of intensity.
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Can people stop a tornado?

We can't stop tornadoes, but by being prepared and following tornado safety rules, lives can be saved and injuries prevented. Warning the public of severe weather is the National Weather Service's (NWS) most important job.
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What are the 3 worst tornadoes?

Deadliest tornadoes in U.S. history
  1. The Tri-State Tornado. On March 18, 1925, the deadliest single tornado in the history of the United States occurred. ...
  2. Tupelo-Gainesville Outbreak. ...
  3. The Great Natchez Tornado. ...
  4. The 1896 St Louis Tornado. ...
  5. The Joplin Tornado.
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What was the fastest tornado in history?

There, it attained the highest-possible rating on the Fujita Scale, F5. A mobile Doppler weather radar recorded winds of 302 mph (486 km/h) within the tornado at Bridge Creek, the highest wind speed ever recorded on Earth.
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What is an F12 tornado?

An F12 tornado would have winds of about 740 MPH, the speed of sound. Roughly 3/4 of all tornadoes are EF0 or EF1 tornadoes and have winds that are less than 100 MPH. EF4 and EF5 tornadoes are rare but cause the majority of tornado deaths.
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What to do if a tornado picks you up?

Move away from windows and glass doorways. Go to the innermost part of the building on the lowest possible floor. Do not use elevators because the power may fail, leaving you trapped. Protect your head and make yourself as small a target as possible by crouching down.
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Can an F1 tornado destroy a house?

F1 winds will damage a roof, F2 level winds can completely remove the roof. The outside walls of the building are still standing. The roof is gone and the outer walls of this house were knocked down in the photo above. This is characteristic of F3 level damage.
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What are 1% of tornadoes?

In the United States, 80% of tornadoes are rated EF0 or EF1 (equivalent to T0 through T3). The rate of occurrence drops off quickly with increasing strength; less than 1% are rated as violent (EF4 or EF5, equivalent to T8 through T11).
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Are skyscrapers tornado proof?

But tornadoes have indeed hit skyscrapers, notably the 35-story Bank One Tower in Fort Worth in 2000. The damage there chiefly involved the glass skin and some interior walls, not the steel structure.
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What wind speed could pick up a human?

Using the formula, it only takes a wind of 3 mph to move a maple leaf. A trash can with trash in it weighting 37 pounds could be moved by a 28 mph wind. An average person could be moved by a 67 mph wind, and an average car can be moved by a 90 mph wind.
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What would an F6 tornado look like?

The F6 tornado would be the granddaddy of all tornadoes. It would have wind speeds exceeding 300 miles per hour at maximum and would be able to lift houses from their foundations like Dorothy's Kansas home in the Wizard of Oz. Car would become ballistic missiles able to hurl at tremendous speeds.
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Which country has the deadliest tornado?

The deadliest tornado in the world happened in Bangladesh in 1989. It destroyed two towns and killed an estimated 1,300 people. Tornadoes have also been reported elsewhere in Asia, including China and Japan.
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How did Matt Suter survive?

He survived after being swept up inside a tornado. One of the tornadoes swept Matt Suter up and threw him nearly a quarter mile from his grandmother's home in Fordland, Missouri. Suter woke up in a grassy field sometime later after being thrown over a barbed wire fence.
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What happens if you drop a bomb in a tornado?

A powerful explosion in the area of tornadic activity is likely to have an effect on atmospheric conditions in the area, causing local changes in pressure and temperature, for example. Local wind changes will occur. The blast wave is likely to cause smaller short-lived whirls of air alongside the main tornado.
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Has anyone ever survived a tornado?

A four-month-old boy has survived after a tornado in Tennessee sucked him up from his family's mobile home, which was demolished in the storm.
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Should you open windows if a tornado is coming?

Forget about the old notion of opening windows to equalize pressure; the tornado will blast open the windows for you! If you shop frequently at certain stores, learn where there are bathrooms, storage rooms or other interior shelter areas away from windows, and the shortest ways to get there.
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What is the rarest tornado in the world?

EF-4 and EF-5 tornadoes are among the rarest cyclones on the planet.
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What was the worst tornado death?

The deadliest tornado in world history was the Daulatpur–Saturia tornado in Bangladesh on April 26, 1989, which killed approximately 1,300 people. In the history of Bangladesh, at least 19 tornadoes killed more than 100 people each, almost half of the total for the world.
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