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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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#11
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Unfortuanly my funds are tight at the moment!
I am trying to get something that records winds, temps, windchill, humidity and can connect to my pc thru software. not essential to be wireless but obviously very usefull I would also like rain gauge but its not essential as long as it can be added later Dont want to spend more than £150-£170 really Liam "Joe, Bedford." wrote in message ... "Liam Tallis" wrote in message ... I've been looking at the La Crosse WS2300 as can be found at http://www.ukweathershop.co.uk/acatalog/lctws_sub.html I only have a cheap Oregon Scientific Wireless temperature and humidity sensor at the moment so am looking for like a medium quality weather station with most features (wind, rainfall). I don't know much about all the brands available e.t.c. or things but does anyone have any experience with La Crosse (and specifically this model) and is it suitable for someone like me who's never had a proper weather station before Cheers Liam Its very poor for recording wind speed. Its sample rate is 30 seconds, meaning it misses gusts (3 second winds). The cheapest Davis gear (around £150/£200 Weather wizard) has a far more accurate anemometer (it samples at 3 seconds). I have the Davis Monitor 2 which is outstanding and is an upgrade to the wizard in that it also records Rain/humidity/pressure. It did cost about £350 though. Have a look at www.ukweathershop.com and www.weatherstations.co.uk my website using Virtual Weather Station software www.weatherwise.org.uk |
#12
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On Tue, 10 Feb 2004 12:19:23 +0000 (UTC), "Tim West"
wrote: Another possibility is the WMR112 kit http://www.meteorologica.co.uk/product.asp?P_ID=51 it allows you to add the rain gauge and anemometer as funds allow! It is a full wireless system with all the sensors being seperate and the response time is 14 seconds for the wind rather than the 128 seconds from the WS2300. The downside is that it won't connect to a PC ![]() A wired WS2300 will sample at 8 seconds, and WILL connect to a PC. I thought there was laws involving how often 433Mhz or whatever it is transmits? Every 14 seconds, are you sure? |
#13
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Yep, all Oregon wind sensors respond at this speed. The key to the law is
that the sensor data burst is extremely short thus the percentage of time that it is "on air" for is not exceeded when it broadcasts every 14 seconds. The Davis weather stations actually send their wind data to the console by radio every 2.5 seconds! They are also legal in the UK as long as they are the UK versions and no the US ones! "bb" wrote in message news ![]() On Tue, 10 Feb 2004 12:19:23 +0000 (UTC), "Tim West" wrote: Another possibility is the WMR112 kit http://www.meteorologica.co.uk/product.asp?P_ID=51 it allows you to add the rain gauge and anemometer as funds allow! It is a full wireless system with all the sensors being seperate and the response time is 14 seconds for the wind rather than the 128 seconds from the WS2300. The downside is that it won't connect to a PC ![]() A wired WS2300 will sample at 8 seconds, and WILL connect to a PC. I thought there was laws involving how often 433Mhz or whatever it is transmits? Every 14 seconds, are you sure? |
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