12-27-2008, 09:22 AM
For you numbers nuts, the weather service recorded 27.44 inches at Hilo Airport over a 24-hour period ending at about 1 p.m. on Nov. 2, 2000, breaking the old 24-hour record of 22.3 inches from 1979. That storm also dumped 16.17 inches on Nov. 2, a record for a calendar day in November. The all-time calendar day record there is 16.87 inches from 1979. The November 2000 storm, which left Highway 11 mangled in KaÔu, also dumped 37 inches over a 24-hour period over that district's Kapapala Ranch, but that fell short of the state 24-hour record of 38.00 inches which occurred at Kilauea, Kauai on Jan. 24-25 in 1956.
Of course if you want to talk about REALLY soggy, ponder these record rainfall figures from the book "Extreme Weather": 4 days - 62 inches in Kukaiau in Hamakua in 1902; 8 days - 82 inches, same place and year; 1 month - 148.83 inches over Mt. Waialeale on Kauai in 1982; and 1 year ÐÊ704.83 at Kukui, Kauai in 1982. While Hawaii holds those records, the book says the most for a one-hour period is 14.30 inches in West Virginia in 1943, and for a 24-hour period it's 43 inches in Alvin, Texas in 1979.
Of course if you want to talk about REALLY soggy, ponder these record rainfall figures from the book "Extreme Weather": 4 days - 62 inches in Kukaiau in Hamakua in 1902; 8 days - 82 inches, same place and year; 1 month - 148.83 inches over Mt. Waialeale on Kauai in 1982; and 1 year ÐÊ704.83 at Kukui, Kauai in 1982. While Hawaii holds those records, the book says the most for a one-hour period is 14.30 inches in West Virginia in 1943, and for a 24-hour period it's 43 inches in Alvin, Texas in 1979.