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by kyteland
746 days ago
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I own this* one and it is set up on a pole off of my deck. I connect it to wunderground.com and anyone can look up data from my station. I'll be sharing with this service as well now that I know about it. * https://ambientweather.com/ws-5000-ultrasonic-smart-weather-... There are much cheaper options than that one if you're interested in hosting a weather station. I decided to install it since I live in a relatively rural area and there is a fairly large gap in coverage where I live. Now I can get more local data and my neighbors can benefit as well. If you live in an urban area odds are a lot of the stations you see on the coverage map are just like this. When I lived in Austin I had a lot nearby readings and if you dig into the info tab for each one you'll see they're personal stations people are sharing. |
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With the Ambient Weather WS-5000, the little console panel is also the hub, so you'll have to have it within signal range. You can put their new "Weather Window" elsewhere in the home:
https://ambientweather.com/awn-weather-window
It also supports indoor and outdoor sensors for room, soil, lightning, etc.:
https://ambientweather.com/wh31e-wireless-temperature-humidi...
As a simpler device but remarkably rich start, I'd recommend people try the Tempest to get started:
https://shop.tempest.earth/products/tempest
The API is incredibly easy to work with, both as local devices and as a station:
https://weatherflow.github.io/Tempest/api/
I'm using both brands in a hostile environment, and find the Tempests last better.
I'm also very interested in Weatherflow's network:
https://business.tempest.earth/tempest-network
And as discussed here, Weatherflow Networks collabs with unis and NOAA:
http://weatherflownetworks.com/noaa-national-mesonet-program
On Android and iOS, you can use an app called SmartMixin to commingle and compare readings across multiple brands of weather device.
https://smartmixin.io/