Bond Strength?

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A double bond is actually composed of a sigma and pi covalent bond- these are intramolecular bonds. A hydrogen bond is a strong type of intermolecular bond. However, a covalent bond is much stronger than a hydrogen bond, hence the double bond has greater bond strength.
 
If I'm not mistaken, looking at the bond dissociation table on this site for example http://www.science.uwaterloo.ca/~cchieh/cact/c120/bondel.html.
It takes 614 kj/mol of energy to break a C=C while it takes 568 kj/mol to break H-F, 366 kj/mol to break O-H, and 391 kj/mol to break H-N. So since it takes greater energy to break C=C, its stronger. Does my reasoning make sense?
 
You guys are saying that double bonds are stronger than hydrogen bonds.
 
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