This is a very useful topic for all who take urban hydrology seriously. Any methodology which aims to provide useful disaggregation from 1 hour rainfall data should be tested against a statistically significant set of 15 minute rainfall data. I suspect we should also be sensitive about applying a methodology across different geographic/climate zones.
Of course, if a nearby 15-minute station IS available, then the pattern can & should be superimposed onto the hourly station. Again, one such simple Fortran utility is offered at
http://www.nvpdc.state.va.us/4MileRun/4mr-swmm.htm#util although this one happens to superimpose HOURLY rainfall onto a DAILY record station.
And again, for those interested in single-event synthetic hyetograph generation, a newly de-bugged utility based on the Keifer & Chu methodology is available at the same URL. The nice thing about this method is that the user can specify short rainfall intensity intervals, load them into SWMM-RUNOFF, and get very sharp, well-defined peak flows. The not-so-nice thing is that unless you have a very long & complete rainfall record, including boatloads of short-duration peaks (preferably as short as a 5-minute interval), your synthetic storm may be meaningless.
In fact, as long as a record is complete enough to have confidence in a synthetic single-event storm, why not just go ahead and run the model in multi-year continuous simulation and let the rainfall data speak for themselves? I'm glad folks like Dr. James are steering us away from single-event "design storms", especially now that computing power/time is less of an issue. (A standard run of the Four Mile Run "supermodel" under a 3-second EXTRAN timestep & a 4-hour design storm takes a half hour to run on my old 486DX2-50, versus a 2 minute runtime on my new P-233MHz PC.) Still, single-event simulations will remain a popular option for quickly determining relative differences in storm sewer design analysis, evaluating land use impacts, etc.
Don Waye
NVPDC