PONCA CITY, OK-WEATHER SITE
PONCA CITY, OK-WEATHER SITE


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300 North 3rd street
Ponca City, Oklahoma 74601

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 FUJITA SCALE CHART

In the U.S., tornadoes are classified according to a system known as the Fujita or Fujita-Pearson scale, named after Professor Theodore Fujita, retired professor at the University of Chicago, and Dr. Alan Pearson, former director of the National Severe Storm Forecast Center (NSSFC), who devised the system in 1971.  This scale relates the wind speed of a tornado to the amount of damage done. This scale may not be a perfect system for linking damage to wind speed, but it had distinct advantages over what had gone on before its inception.  

There are seven levels in the Fujita scale,  F0 - F6.

F-Scale Number Intensity Phrase Wind Speed Type of Damage Done
F0 Gale tornado 40-72 mph Some damage to chimneys; breaks branches off trees; pushes over shallow-rooted trees; damages sign boards
F1 Moderate tornado 73-112 mph The lower limit is the beginning of hurricane wind speed; peels surface off roofs; mobile homes pushed off foundations or overturned; moving autos pushed off the roads; attached garages may be destroyed
F2 Significant tornado 113-157 mph Considerable damage.  Roof torn off frame houses; mobile homes demolished; boxcars pushed over; large trees snapped or uprooted; light object missiles generated
F3 Severe tornado 159-206 mph Roof and some walls torn off well constructed houses; trains overturned; most trees in forest uprooted
F4 Devastating tornado 207-260 mph Well-constructed houses leveled; structures with weak foundations blown off some distance; cars thrown and large missiles generated.
F5 Incredible tornado 261-318 mph Strong frame houses lifted off foundations and carried considerable distances to disintegrate; automobile sized missiles fly through the air in excess of 100 meters; trees debarked; steel re-enforced concrete structures badly damaged.
F6 Inconceivable tornado 319-379 mph These winds are very unlikely. The small area of damage they might produce would probably not be recognizable along with the mess produced by F4 and F5 wind that would surround the F6 winds. Missiles, such as cars and refrigerators would do serious secondary damage that could not be directly identified as F6 damage. If this level is ever achieved, evidence for it might only be found in some manner of ground swirl pattern, for it may never be identifiable through engineering studies.

A key point to remember is that the size of a tornado is not necessarily an indication of its intensity.  Large tornadoes can be weak, and small tornadoes can be violent.  The Fujita Scale is based on damage, not the appearance of the funnel.  Although storm spotters, storm chasers and other weather observers often try to judge the intensity of a tornado when they are in the field, the official estimate or classification is made after the tornado has passed.

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