You can't size a detention basin using only the Rational Method. There are some modifications to the method which can be used; e.g Los Angeles County ( sse below ).
But! If the basin is on a ridge how does runoff reach it ? Do you pump 25 cfs ( 12,000 gpm !) ?
Here is the method as described by Los Angeles County:
"MODRAT is a modified rational method computer program developed by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Works (LACDPW) to compute runoff rates under a variety of conditions common to the area of Los Angeles, California…….. MODRAT may be used to find flow rates for any watershed with any combination of existing or proposed channels and drains. Further, the watershed may be undeveloped, partially developed, or completely developed. The model will compute runoff rates for any frequency design storm (storm patterns developed by LACDPW), as well as any other storm which can be represented by a rainfall mass curve. Given any combination of the above variables, MODRAT will compute a hydrographs (sic) for each subarea and mainline or lateral collection point in the watershed……
"Modifications to the Rational Method in MODRAT
"As a method of urban hydrology, the rational method falls short in several ways. First, the method does not produce a hydrograph, only a single flow rate. Second, the rational method does not account for changing (time dependent) conditions such as soil condition or rainfall intensity. Finally, results are not very accurate for large areas. Due to these problems, MODRAT contains the following modifications:
* Rainfall intensity, i, is a variable dependent on rainfall frequency, storm time, and time of concentration. The variation of i is represented by a temporal distribution curve (rainfall mass curve).
* C, the runoff coefficient, varies with soil type, rainfall intensity, and imperviousness.
* The time variation of C and i allow the flow, Q, to vary with time, thus producing a hydrograph. The area under the hydrograph represents the total volume of flow from a watershed, a variable which the rational method does not provide.
* Hydrographs may be computed for a number of subareas, for each lateral to the main channel, and for each collection point on the main channel. These hydrographs are routed and combined as computation progresses downstream.
"The above modifications to the rational method allowed (sic) for the computation of storm hydrographs for any size watershed. With such improvements, the modified rational method (MODRAT) has been adopted by LACDPW as the preferred method of hydrologic analysis."