A major hailstorm struck Brisbane's southwest and northeast suburbs with gusts to 187 km/h at Brisbane Airport. These extreme wind gusts turned hail up to cricket ball size into dangerous missiles. Damage was widespread with 2000 houses unroofed, 20000 damaged and 12 structurally unsafe. The damage track was 8 to 12 km wide from Jamboree Heights to Banyo. Major damage occurred in the Jamboree Heights, Corinda, Sherwood, Graceville area and a region bounded by Windsor, Chermside, Banyo, Eagle Farm and Hamilton.

The storm struck at peak hour, and the resulting traffic jam left thousands of cars stranded like sitting ducks in the open. The ferocious hail missiles inflicted severe damage to body panels and windscreens. Twenty people were injured during the storm.

The rain was extremely heavy and 55mm was recorded in 10 minutes. This caused severe flash flooding in the city taking out the electric train network at peak hour.

The insurance bill was $300 million AUD ($AU1.7 billion in 2007 adjusted dollars). Brisbane was virtually left without glass for two years.

Link: More info on this event

Brisbane Severe Storm 1985: damage

Brisbane Severe Storm 1985: Brisbane airport radar echoes