La Crosse Technology Combo11-IT Wireless Temperature Station with Atomic Time & Date Coupled with Wireless Forecast Station and Wireless Remote Sensor


Two for the price of one and both accurate5

I've had this weather station up and running for over a week and it is doing well. My previous one was a sophisticated (and much more expensive) Oregon Scientific that died with no chance of resurrection a little over a year along. This evidently made me wary of the brand so I decided to go for the La Crosse this time around and keep it simpler.



The Combo11-IT is actually two weather stations -- one complete and one basic -- in one package plus an external temperature and humidity sensor. The more complete station is the WS-9037U-IT and the basic one is the WS-9080UR-JT. There is no way you can apprehend this from reading the skimpy info in the product page and I only found out when I received it. This two-in-one scheme is very handy because for instance you can have one station in the living room and the other one in the bedroom and both are fed the same data from the external transmitter.



The more complete panel is very similar to other La Crosse models and gives you:

* Time in 12 or 24 hrs and date (set by atomic clock if you live in the US or manually if you don't)

* Moon phase

* Indoor temperature and humidity (celsius or fahrenheit and % respectively) plus a comfort indicator icon that states the obvious

* Forecast which is dependent on barometric pressure changes. Another set of icons composed of an arrow and an image. Arrow can point upwards or downwards and the icon can indicate "sunny" "cloudy with sunny intervals" or "rainy"

* Barometric pressure in Hg or hPa

* Barometric pressure 24-hour history

* Outdoor temperature and humidity (C /F and %) plus the comfort indicator



You can also set the station to alarm clock mode with or without snooze and customize several parameters such as measuring units forecast icon sensitivity back-light intensity etc. and see the maximum and minimum indoor and outdoor temps and humidity for the last 24 hours.



The basic panel gives you only time (12/24 hrs) indoor and outdoor temperatures (C or F) and minimum and maximum temperatures in the last 24 hours. It comes with its own little manual. You can set the time by the atomic clock or manually and adjust the LCD display's contrast.



The weather-resistant outdoor transmitter only displays the current temperature reading in fahrenheit which I found very odd. My stations are set to celsius (I am metric) and there is no way to set the transmitter to it. I emailed La Crosse about this -- the package contains helpful info about contacting them for support including an email address -- but more than a week has passed and still no reply. I no longer expect one...



I advise you to read the manual as there is a procedure to set up the main units and the transmitter and all the configuring is done with 5 buttons on the right side. However I found it easy and quick and got it right the first time around in a few minutes.



The readings from both units appear to be accurate enough. I put them in different rooms in places with no direct sunlight and the temperature variation between them is just 0.3 celsius (roughly 0.6F). The external transmitter reaches both units equally well.



Both units have a nice discreet design and appear well built. The complete one has a very firm detachable stand or can be wall-mounted. The basic unit has a fold-in stand and can also be wall-hung.



The one thing that really daunted me was getting all the components out of their horrendous packaging. It was one of those impossible-to-cut-open plastic and cardboard setups that nearly made me send the whole thing back. But once I overcame this first hurdle (with a brand-new cut on my finger) the rest was easy.



I like the Combo11-IT pack and think that it is good value for the money. I just hope it lasts for a long time.



















More detail ...

0 comments:

Post a Comment

My Blog List