I have been through so many during my 30 years living and working in Puerto Rico that it is hard to recall all of them.
Georges, David, Hugo, Allen, Eloise, Frederick, Luis, Marylin. And there were a number of near-misses with 8 to 10 inches of rain.
Frederick's eye came right over my home. Afterwards, the big sign from a gas station a mile away was on my neighbor's roof, and in some wood frame homes on a hill above us, all the walls and roofs were torn off... our stations were on generator for a week, one of them (WPRM) was off the air until we could raise an emergency antenna onto a phone pole... the tower atop Cerro La Santa was totally destroyed.
The stations that were on the air, including WKAQ, did all hurricane coverage for several days.
Depending on whether a hurricane sideswiped us or passed over, the danger was still flooding and bridges washing out. It made transportation and the delivery of fuel nearly impossible. On some occasions, we camped out at the stations and always had lots of supplies for that... and up to two weeks of fuel for the generator. We also had a hardened high-wheelbase vehicle we could use to get to the FM sites on the mountaintops around the island.