Pilot
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Nov 20, 2004
- Messages
- 1,219
- Location
- Oregon
- Tractor
- JD 770, Yanmar 180D, JD 420 (not running), had a Kubota B6200
We have a LaCrosse unit that has been working about 5 or 6 years. Changed the outdoor batteries once when it went kind of wacko, but that didn't fix the problem. It did start working correctly a day or 2 later.
BTW, the unit only updates wind speeds about once every minute and a half, which is worthless.
If you buy a weather station, check the wind reporting frequency before you buy.
Weather stations need to be located properly to be very accurate. That means in an open grassy field, away from any obstacles that could block the wind and any shade or heat sources. Example: When we had a heat pump installed, the unit came with a temp sensor so it would switch to propane if it got too cold to be efficient (and it reports the temp on the thermostat in the house). The tech checked it with a remote infra-red thermometer. Since I had a cheapie unit from Harbor Freight, I checked it against his and it was spot on. But they both differed a lot from my weather station. So I take my HF unit out to the weather station and checked it & it agreed with the weather station at that location. The heat pump is on the south side of the garage on concrete, the weather station is in the middle of a grassy field & they often read as much as 15 degrees different. Right now, on rainy, solid overcast and windy day 20 minutes before sunset they are within 4 deg. C.
BTW, the unit only updates wind speeds about once every minute and a half, which is worthless.
If you buy a weather station, check the wind reporting frequency before you buy.
Weather stations need to be located properly to be very accurate. That means in an open grassy field, away from any obstacles that could block the wind and any shade or heat sources. Example: When we had a heat pump installed, the unit came with a temp sensor so it would switch to propane if it got too cold to be efficient (and it reports the temp on the thermostat in the house). The tech checked it with a remote infra-red thermometer. Since I had a cheapie unit from Harbor Freight, I checked it against his and it was spot on. But they both differed a lot from my weather station. So I take my HF unit out to the weather station and checked it & it agreed with the weather station at that location. The heat pump is on the south side of the garage on concrete, the weather station is in the middle of a grassy field & they often read as much as 15 degrees different. Right now, on rainy, solid overcast and windy day 20 minutes before sunset they are within 4 deg. C.