Conrad,
The numbers you showed are not very useful in that form. Meteors traditionally have been counted by the hour. First there is no standard to check the count against. Meteors are random but sometimes more and sometimes less. That is the first standard, diurnal. Are you showing good diurnal in your counts? Look on the website
rmob.org
Here you see the meteor counts represented as colors. At 12 UT (Morning) I have maximum counts for the day and at 0000UT (evening)I have minimum counts. This is the diurnal ( this for my longitude, 90W). Counts depend on many things that are hard to measure: antenna orientation, antenna gain, strength of the transmitter, strength of the reflection of the ionized trail, is there a shower going on, where is the radiant, time of the year, etc..
Just when you think you know something then an old book comes along. Meteor Astronomy by Lovell 1954. I was aghast how much I didn't know! It is a free download but I can't find it right now. Lovell and Hey were the first guys looking at radio meteors.
I am glad you got a station going. I remember when you was first asking.
GL
BR
Mike