Non-tornadic The fastest wind speed not related to
tornadoes ever recorded was during the passage of Tropical
Cyclone Olivia on 10 April 1996: an
automatic weather station on
Barrow Island,
Australia, registered a maximum
wind gust of The wind gust was evaluated by the WMO Evaluation Panel, who found that the anemometer was mechanically sound and that the gust was within statistical probability and ratified the measurement in 2010. The anemometer was mounted 10 m above ground level (and thus 64 m above sea level). During the cyclone, several extreme gusts of greater than were recorded, with a maximum 5-minute mean speed of ; the extreme gust factor was on the order of 2.27–2.75 times the mean wind speed. The pattern and scales of the gusts suggest that a
mesovortex was embedded in the already-strong
eyewall of the cyclone. The second and third-highest non-tornadic wind gusts measured regardless of height off the surface of the Earth were from
Hurricane Melissa in
2025 and
Typhoon Megi in
2010, having maximum measured wind gust speeds of and , respectively. Currently, the second-highest surface wind speed ever officially recorded is at the
Mount Washington (New Hampshire) Observatory above sea level in the US on 12 April 1934, using a
hot-wire anemometer. The anemometer, specifically designed for use on Mount Washington, was later tested by the US
National Weather Bureau and confirmed to be accurate.
Tornadic Wind speeds within certain atmospheric phenomena (such as
tornadoes) may greatly exceed these values but have never been accurately measured. Directly measuring these tornadic winds is rarely done, as the violent wind would destroy the instruments. A method of estimating speed is to use
Doppler on Wheels or mobile
Doppler weather radars to measure the wind speeds remotely. Using this method, a mobile radar (
RaXPol) owned and operated by the
University of Oklahoma recorded winds up to inside the
2013 El Reno tornado, marking the fastest winds ever observed by radar in history. In 1999, a mobile radar measured winds up to during the
1999 Bridge Creek–Moore tornado in
Oklahoma on 3 May, although another figure of has also been quoted for the same tornado. Yet another number used by the Center for Severe Weather Research for that measurement is . However, speeds measured by
Doppler weather radar are not considered official records. == Measurement ==