Triple Sensor Weather StationPros:
Price less than $100.
Fewer batteries 5 - AA's
Battery only no wall wart required
Long Battery Life ~2 Years
Detailed illustrated manual
Altitude adjustment for the barometer
Impressive wireless range
* Rain gauge more useful than expected
Cons:
Mixed reviews
No radio receiver for WWV's Atomic Clock
Temp sensor not weather proof
No inside temp reading
No PC Connection
*Painful Max/Min reset procedure
Looking at the product picture one sees The Weather Channel logo yet if you go to their store nothing approaching this product exists. My conclusion is that after six-months at the TWC they wanted no part of the headaches and shipped their inventory back to Lacrosse for sale on Amazon. So this price disappears with that inventory.
* I no longer believe the above I've seen this exact model for sale at Wal-Mart.
In researching the triple sensor (temp wind rain) market I was primarily interested in temp and wind. Since its always windy in the winter now I'll know how windy. It rains so seldom that why bother measuring besides it won't measure snow and humidity is always so low it's at the fringe of dry sensor measurement. I'm not a weather hobbiest so PC connection was unimportant besides being impractical in my solar-electric home. I'll just do the same as the last 10-years write down the daily min and max in the monthly wall calendar how crude pen and paper.
I considered Oregon Scientific better reviews more features but much more expensive and it needed 10 batteries and a wall wart. Also Zephyr and Davis the first had no reviews or downloadable manual and the latter was out of my price range. I read many positive and negative reviews for the 1611/1612 and I downloaded several manuals. In the end I decided on the "devil I knew" my $20 La Cross wireless thermometer 9013 had been reliable for many years. I'll keep it around for its atomic clock.
Like all La Crosse weather instruments the top line of the display is the time and date on a weather station? Then the date field is so tight mine now reads 11209 unlike the time field there are no spaces or delimiters. The single most important reading the outdoor temp is buried in the fourth group duh. Since you can get an atomic clock on $15 units one has to wonder why its not included on the 1611? Having all that in mind I was price driven so the 1611 is it.
A clever feature of the 1611 is one pair of AA's inside the temp sensor powers it and both the rain and wind sensors all wired together. Now it gets strange if all these sensors are outside and wirelessly connected to the base station why is the temp sensor not weather proof? It has to be protected from rain and sun Duh? So I made a "bird house" to protect the "outdoor" sensor from the weather.
I have the sensors roughly 200-feet from the base the signal has to pass through a 12" solid wood wall and the base is sitting on a table with a wireless b/g router and a wireless mouse no problems. I'm impressed.
I've attached two photos may help to visualize setup. *Added three more pics.
Edit (*)July 10 2009
After the wind blew over my original mast and smashed the wind sensor into too many pieces to count I bought a second used unit. I guyed the mast with four steel cables see pic. I now have two working base stations and a few spare parts.
I have two more complaints about the user interface:
1) Resetting the max/min readings. Press Max/Min to scroll through all the possible values > press Set then press + for every value you wish to reset. Theirs no master reset.
2) The Beaufort wind speed scale is meaningless unless you live on the ocean and own a boat. I'd much prefer the MPH value be inside the wind rose.
More detail ...
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