Roof damage is typical of an F1 tornado.  The buildings on the left suffered light roof damage.  The barn roof at right was more heavily damaged.  Barns present a larger crossection to the wind and often aren't built as sturdily as a house.

More severe damage to what appears to be a well built house roof but still an F1 tornado.


Even relatively weak winds can damage a mobile home.  F1 tornado winds can easily tip over a mobile home if it is not tied down (the caption states that an F1 tornado could blow a moving car off a highway).  F2 level winds (bottom photo above) can roll and completely destroy a mobile home.




Trees, if not uprooted, can suffer serious damage from F1 or F2 tornado winds.

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.  In a house without a basement or storm cellar it would be best to seek shelter in an interior closet or bathroom (plumbing might help somewhat to keep the walls intact).



In some tornado prone areas, people construct a small closet or room inside their home made of reinforced concrete.
A better solution might be to have a storm cellar located underground.


An F4 tornado knocked down all of the walls in the top photo but the debris is left nearby.   All of the sheet metal in the car body has been removed in the bottom photo and the car chasis has been bent around a tree.  The tree has been stripped of all but the largest branches.



An F5 tornado completely destroyed the home in the photo above and removed most of the debris.  Only bricks and a few pieces of lumber are left.