The Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit (AMSU)-A/Advanced Technology Microwave Sounder (ATMS) onboard the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)-18/-19, MetOp-A/-B, and Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership satellites provide global observations of the cloud Liquid Water Path (LWP) almost 10 times a day. This study explores the possibility of capturing the diurnal cycle of the LWP. An inter-satellite cross-calibration is first carried out using a double-difference method. A remapping is then used to obtain the AMSU-A-like LWP to account for beam shape discrepancies between the ATMS and AMSU-A. We finally examine the diurnal cycle of the LWP over the Southeast Pacific Ocean using the ATMS and AMSU-A data from the five satellites mentioned above. Results show that the remapped ATMS results agree well with the AMSU-A results at the same local time over a stratocumulus region. LWP retrievals from multiple satellite cross-track microwave radiometers can well reproduce the diurnal variation characteristics of LWP in 2015 over the East Pacific Ocean, including the seasonal variation of the diurnal variation. This study presents the first step toward merging LWP data from all ATMS and AMSU-A radiometers and will be of interest to many researchers studying LWP-related weather and climate changes, especially considering the possible loss of higher-resolution microwave-frequency conical-scanning sensors in the coming years.