During the hurricane that hit Faroe Islands on the evening 24 Nov. 2011 record high wave hight was measured just west of the Islands.
At around 22 in the evening the mean wave hight in west was 19,7 meter and about the same time south of the islands 16,8 meters.
The position of the wave buoys
http://landsverk.fo/Default.aspx?pageid=16287The previous record mean wave ever measured in the world is 18,5 meters.
In February 2000 those onboard a British oceanographic research vessel near Rockall, west of Scotland experienced the largest waves ever recorded by scientific instruments in the open ocean. Under severe gale force conditions with wind speeds averaging 21 ms−1 a shipborne wave recorder measured individual waves up to 29.1 m from crest to trough, and a maximum significant wave height of 18.5 m. The fully formed sea developed in unusual conditions as westerly winds blew across the North Atlantic for two days, during which time a frontal system propagated at a speed close to the group velocity of the peak waves. (source agu.org)
Before the low preasure hit the Islands uk metoffice had a prediction of phenomenal wave hight and yr.no had a prediction of around 15-20 meters.
At this time not all the data from the buoy has been retrieved.
Later the hurricane was named "Berit" as is came closer to Norway.
Some places in the Faroes it was estimated as powerfull as the hurricane Dec 1988.
5 small boats dissapered 3 of the from a sea farm. a few larger vessels broke their moorings