Here is another scale, of sorts, I did. It is inspired by both the IKE and HSI scales, and has an "overall" threat assessment. This is more focused toward landfall threats. For out to sea storms, I would recommend just using winds and waves (or not putting anything at all).
Components:
Winds
Surge
Waves
Rainfall
Inland Flooding
Component break down wrote:Wind:
0 <39
1 40 - 55
2 55 - 70
3 70 - 85
4 85 - 100
5 100 - 115
6 115 - 130
7 130 - 145
8 145 - 160
9 160 - 175
10 175+ mph
Surge:
1 0 - 3 feet
2 3 - 6 feet
3 6 - 9 feet
4 9 - 12 feet
5 12 - 15 feet
6 15 - 18 feet
7 18 - 21 feet
8 21 - 24 feet
9 24 - 27 feet
10 27 + feet
Waves:
0 0 - 5 feet
1 5 - 10
2 10 - 15
3 15 - 20
4 20 - 25
5 25 - 30
6 30 - 35
7 35 - 40
8 40 - 45
9 45 - 50
10 50+ feet
Rainfall:
0 0.0 - 2.5 inches
1 2.5 - 5.0 inches
2 5.0 - 7.5 inches
3 7.5 - 10.0
4 10.0 - 12.5
5 12.5 - 15.0
6 15.0 - 17.5
7 17.5 - 20.0
8 20.0 - 22.5
9 22.5 - 25.0
10 25.0+ inches
Inland Flooding:
1 Low: Nuisance flooding, small streams flooding, poor drainage areas and street flooding may occur.
4 Medium: Smaller rivers may flood, nuisance flooding likely. Some evacuations possible.
7 High: Major flooding possible, many evacuations likely due to flooding.
10 Extremely High: Flooding of epic proportions likely (record levels).
Overall threat level:
Add numbers together, divide by 5.
Examples:
Hurricane Isabel:
September 17 5 pm EDT advisory
Winds: 105 mph (5)
Surge: 7 to 11 feet (4)
Waves: 25 feet (4)*
Rainfall: 6 to 10 inches (3)
Inland Flooding: Medium (4)
Overall threat assessment:
On a scale of 0 to 10: 4.0
*No wave size is in the TCR or reviews by NWS Newport/Morehead City, so wave size is a guess.
Hurricane Katrina:
August 28 5 pm EDT advisory
Winds: 165 mph (9)
Surge: 18 to 22 feet, locally as high as 28 feet (8)
Waves: 40 feet (7)*
Rainfall: 5 to 10 inches with higher amounts possible (3)
Inland Flooding: Medium (4)
Overall threat assessment:
On a scale of 0 to 10: 6.2
*Significant Wave size out in the Gulf, per a NOAA buoy, measured between 30 and 55 feet, according to the TCR.
Hurricane Issac:
August 28 5 pm EDT advisory
Winds: 80 mph (3)
Surge: Max 6 to 12 feet (4)
Waves: 20 feet (4)*
Rainfall: 7 to 14 inches, up to 20 inches possible (5)
Inland Flooding: High (7)
Overall threat assessment:
On a scale of 0 to 10: 4.6
*No wave size is listed in the advisories, and post storm studies are incomplete at this time.
Interesting note: Overall threat assessment for this Category 1 Hurricane is higher than Category 2 Isabel.
Tropical Storm Ernesto:
Winds: 70 mph (3)*
Surge: 3 to 5 feet (2)
Waves: 15 feet (2)**
Rainfall: 4 to 8 inches, up to 12 inches (3)
Inland Flooding: Medium (4)***
Overall threat assessment:
On a scale of 0 to 10: 2.8
*Increased wind threat to 3 due to possibility of slight strengthening prior to landfall.
**No wave data, 15 feet is an estimate.
***Life threatening flash floods listed as possible, no mention of major river flooding though. Decided Medium threat was appropriate.
Hurricane Ike:
Winds: 105 mph (5)
Surge: Up to 20 feet, 25 feet possible (8)*
Waves: 25 feet (4)**
Rainfall: 5 to 10 inches, 15 possible (3)
Inland Flooding: Medium (4)
Overall threat assessment:
On a scale of 0 to 10: 4.8
*Raised risk one level, in effort to increase evacuation efforts. Level is within possible surge range.
**Estimate.
EDIT:
I edited the surge scale. I got rid of the 0. All examples have been updated to reflect this change.