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Tornadoes fluctuate in intensity. An F5 tornado is only at F5 strength for part of the time it is on the ground.
f1 f2 f3 f4 f5
f1 f2 f3 f4 f5
F5
In most cases an F5 tornado will be larger than an F1. However, tornado ratings are a measure of the strength of a tornado, not its size. F5 is the strongest category, and such tornadoes are usually very large, but a few have been fairly small. Conversely, F1 is the second lowest rating (F0 is the lowest) and such tornadoes are generally small, but some have been huge.
on a dell inspiron laptop F1 is used to connect your laptop to another screen, extend your screen or connect to a projecter. F2 is to connect or unconnect to the internet and F5 is to make the screen lighter
fart for 43 hrs and then press f5 f8 f9 f7 f5 and f1 f2 f3 f4 f5 f6 f7 f8 f9 f10 f11 f12
click f1,f2,f3,f4,f5,f6,f7
Battleships are classified into five categories, F1 F2 F3 F4 F5
The scale runs from F0 (not very bad at all) F5 (incredible destruction) so an F1 would be considered a relatively weak tornado.
In most cases an F1 tornado does not have that much energy and soon runs out and is more easily disrupted, though a few F1 tornadoes have had long damage paths. By contrast an F5 tornado will generally have several orders of magnitude more energy to release. Additionally, such a strong tornado could be considered more robust. A shift in the parent storm that might cut can F1 tornado's lifespan and thus damage path short, while the same shift might only weaken an F5 tornado somewhat.
esc, f1, f2, f3, f4, f5, f6, f7, f8, f9 :)