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uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) (uk.sci.weather) For the discussion of daily weather events, chiefly affecting the UK and adjacent parts of Europe, both past and predicted. The discussion is open to all, but contributions on a practical scientific level are encouraged. |
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#1
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A quick heads-up for anyone not already awa
The range of Davis VP2 stations is now available with an enhanced temp/hum sensor as an _option_, which confers optimum temperature accuracy of ±0.3C around 20C and better RH accuracy across the humidity range, including at high RH values. The enhanced sensors are available in VP2 stations with new model numbers such as 6155UK and 6164UK for the standard wireless VP2 and VP2 Plus stations respectively. The existing 6152UK/6162UK etc stations continue unchanged. Further details can be found about midway down our main VP2 website page at: http://www.weatherstations.co.uk/vp_main.htm John Dann www.weatherstations.co.uk |
#2
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I've had a VP2 for close on 10 years now and it has been both reliable (apart from the UV sensor) and given me years of trouble free service. The only trouble is that in all that time the price has remained stubbornly high and the design has hardly changed. You could argue thats because the design is near perfect but it would be good to see some innovation coming through, perhaps making the wind vane and anemometer independent of the rest of the sensors in some way. The cups could be used to generate a small current to power some rechargeable batteries that powered the comms. I think it won't be long before someone hooks up a Raspberry Pi to some sensors to accomplish a lot of what the VP2 can do, who knows someone has propably printed a very small wind vane and anemometer in a 3D printer as I write...
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#3
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"Bruce Messer" wrote in message
... The cups could be used to generate a small current to power some rechargeable batteries that powered the comms. I think that would need to be quite a careful/clever design to ensure that using the power generated didn't impact the accuracy of the speed measurement. Using a small/cheap solar panel is probably still a simpler solution. I think it won't be long before someone hooks up a Raspberry Pi to some sensors to accomplish a lot of what the VP2 can do Oh yes, it's been done many times already, but using either third-party sensors (like the Davis sensors but typically something cheaper and more basic like Vortex or FOS) but so far these end up as 'hobby' projects because the work is driven largely by coders who don't really appreciate the importance of decent sensors and of sensor exposure to measurement accuracy. And in the long run they suffer because the sensors used are just not of good enough quality or eg the radiation shields fall well short of what a Davis shield can deliver (not that a Davis shield is perfect but it does set something of a benchmark for what's possible in a more affordable design). But the real killer for Pi-based systems, at least to my way of thinking, is that they always end up as wired systems (for use in a serious AWS if used as the sensor interface) and hence typically with some real practical constraints on sensor exposure. (And also bearing in mind that using Davis sales in the UK as a reference, wireless systems outsell wired by about maybe 20:1, so user preference is clearly on the side of wireless.) The more general answer though is simply the word 'competition'. We've long been waiting for the day when there would be serious price or performance competition against Davis but so far it just hasn't happened. No doubt things will change one day and when they do then Davis will need to respond. But 2015 doesn't look like the year so far. Of course, there's a lot of development interest and activity going on in the background and everyone commercially involved in the field can see which way new designs are likely to evolve. But TBH looking at the Davis sensors is probably not the right target - the sensors are arguably reasonable value for the features they deliver. Where there is a lot more immediate scope for alternatives is on the console/logger side of things. Look at what you can already do with a MeteoStick plugged in to a RPi or a MeteoBridge (but still receiving data from Davis sensors outside). JGD |
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