

http://www.floodsafety.com/media/pdfs/texas/ivey.pdf
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HURAKAN wrote:Great pictures. That's for posting this up. Allison was a true surprise. No one expected the storm to be so devastating after forming almost in a flash.
Category 5 wrote:Interesting fact about Allison is that she originated as a Cape Verde wave, and took a trip to the EPAC before developing in the GOM.
Cyclone1 wrote:Category 5 wrote:Interesting fact about Allison is that she originated as a Cape Verde wave, and took a trip to the EPAC before developing in the GOM.
Didn't the first Allison do something like that too, becoming Cosme in the middle?
The similarities between those two storms are mind blowing.
weatherguru18 wrote:I'd argue that it was sub-tropical and was a mere depression...if that... by the time it devastated Houston. Oh how I remember Allison. Water got dangerously close to my house...and we're in like a thousand year flood plain or some crap like that.
Cyclone1 wrote:
Didn't the first Allison do something like that too, becoming Cosme in the middle?
The similarities between those two storms are mind blowing.
jeff wrote:The maximum 12 hour rainfall recorded was by ALERT station 1600 (Mt. Houston Rd at Greens Bayou) and was 28.3 inches. This was likely off by 2-3 inches due to the intense hourly rainfall rates and the inability of the tipping bucket to catch all the rain fall at that rate...however the official number is 28.3 in 12 hours. The same gage alose recorded 13.5 inches in 3 hours and 21.2 inches in 6 hours. The 4-day total was 38.6 inches.
ALERT station 1620 (Ley Rd at Greens Bayou) recorded 10.7 inches in 3 hours, 14.8 inches in 6 hours, 25.6 inches in 12 hours, and 33.7 inches in 4-days. A 1-hr total of 5.2 inches was recorded at this site.
The highest 1-hr total recorded was 6.3 inches at Halls Bayou and Jensen Dr.
the 1% rainfall rate based on TP 40 for Harris County is 4.8 inches, 6-hr is 8.8 inches, 12-hr is 10.5 inches.
The 28.3 inches in 12 hours is 15.7 inches above the 24-hr 1% rainfall rate of 12.6 inches.
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