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Latest Cumulus MX V3 release 3.28.6 (build 3283) - 21 March 2024
Cumulus MX V4 beta test release 4.0.0 (build 4019) - 03 April 2024
Legacy Cumulus 1 release 1.9.4 (build 1099) - 28 November 2014
(a patch is available for 1.9.4 build 1099 that extends the date range of drop-down menus to 2030)
Download the Software (Cumulus MX / Cumulus 1 and other related items) from the Wiki
Ecowitt Accuracy
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- Posts: 265
- Joined: Tue 10 Sep 2013 8:40 pm
- Weather Station: Ecowitt GW1003 (GW1000)
- Operating System: Raspbian 10 (Buster) / Mono 6.12
- Location: Freiston, Lincolnshire, UK
- Contact:
Ecowitt Accuracy
Just thought I would share this. I am quite impressed by the accuracy of the GW1003.
I did a comparison on the MetOffice website between my station and the nearest official Met Office station in Holbeach (12 miles away as the crow flies)
3 Sections on the graph, quite explanatory.
The Maplin temp / hum sensor was located in a shady spot where it only received a small amount of direct sunlight. The Ecowitt is "in the open" and totally exposed. I guess they have a good radiation shield on there.
I did a comparison on the MetOffice website between my station and the nearest official Met Office station in Holbeach (12 miles away as the crow flies)
3 Sections on the graph, quite explanatory.
The Maplin temp / hum sensor was located in a shady spot where it only received a small amount of direct sunlight. The Ecowitt is "in the open" and totally exposed. I guess they have a good radiation shield on there.
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- Posts: 1819
- Joined: Sat 17 Dec 2011 11:55 am
- Weather Station: Davis Vantage Pro2
- Operating System: Windows 11 x64
- Location: Dorset - UK
- Contact:
Re: Ecowitt Accuracy
Isn't the temp/humidity sensor inside the anemometer used for better wind measurements during wet or cold conditions? I think you're supposed to buy the additional temp/humidity sensor for the correct readings?!
- galfert
- Posts: 195
- Joined: Tue 03 May 2016 2:57 pm
- Weather Station: Ecowitt GW1000
- Operating System: Mint, Raspberry Pi OS, Synology
- Location: Orlando, FL
Re: Ecowitt Accuracy
The WH32 outdoor sensor is optional. Ecowitt sells the GW1003 with the WS80 as a complete station. It is just us hobbyists that know better, that the temperature and humidity sensors should not be all the way up on a tall pole. Which is why we recommend the optional WH32, but it is just a recommendation, not a requirement.
Ecowitt GW1000 | Meteobridge RPI | CumulusMX on Synology NAS
WU: KFLWINTE111 | PWSweather: KFLWINTE111
CWOP: FW3708 | AWEKAS: 14814
Windy: pws-f075acbe
Tele-Pole flag pole
WU: KFLWINTE111 | PWSweather: KFLWINTE111
CWOP: FW3708 | AWEKAS: 14814
Windy: pws-f075acbe
Tele-Pole flag pole
- galfert
- Posts: 195
- Joined: Tue 03 May 2016 2:57 pm
- Weather Station: Ecowitt GW1000
- Operating System: Mint, Raspberry Pi OS, Synology
- Location: Orlando, FL
Re: Ecowitt Accuracy
Very nice graph. A lot of old Maplin and old Fine Offset users should see this and realize that they have much to gain by upgrading their old stations.
Ecowitt GW1000 | Meteobridge RPI | CumulusMX on Synology NAS
WU: KFLWINTE111 | PWSweather: KFLWINTE111
CWOP: FW3708 | AWEKAS: 14814
Windy: pws-f075acbe
Tele-Pole flag pole
WU: KFLWINTE111 | PWSweather: KFLWINTE111
CWOP: FW3708 | AWEKAS: 14814
Windy: pws-f075acbe
Tele-Pole flag pole
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- Posts: 3253
- Joined: Sat 13 Aug 2011 9:33 am
- Weather Station: Ecowitt HP2551
- Operating System: Windows 10 64bit
- Location: Burnham-on-Sea
- Contact:
Re: Ecowitt Accuracy
What I am not clear on is exactly what pieces of Ecowitt kit is required for instance to give the same set up as WH1081 (Temp in/out, Hum In/out, Pressure, Rainfall, Wind Dir/speed, logging and connectivity to Cumulus), and then what additions can be made.
Also where do you get it, from Hong Kong, somewhere else and making sure it conforms with UK Wireless bands.
Perhaps one of you happy Ecowitt users could put that together as a list and suppliers?
- HansR
- Posts: 5964
- Joined: Sat 20 Oct 2012 6:53 am
- Weather Station: GW1100 (WS80/WH40)
- Operating System: Raspberry OS/Bookworm
- Location: Wagenborgen (NL)
- Contact:
Re: Ecowitt Accuracy
Good idea @water01, make a suggestion for a Davis Vantage Pro 2+ Temp in/out, Hum In/out, Pressure, Rainfall, Wind Dir/speed, logging and connectivity to Cumulus plus solar and UV. Usually if you can by piece by piece you end up pretty expensive. What where and how much does it cost? My Davis is 12 years old and beginning to fade. Especially the battery of the transmitter does one per week now.
Oh, and I would be in NL for costs of sending... what is efficient?
Oh, and I would be in NL for costs of sending... what is efficient?
Hans
https://meteo-wagenborgen.nl
CMX build 4017+ ● RPi 3B+ ● Raspbian Linux 6.1.21-v7+ armv7l ● dotnet 8.0.3
https://meteo-wagenborgen.nl
CMX build 4017+ ● RPi 3B+ ● Raspbian Linux 6.1.21-v7+ armv7l ● dotnet 8.0.3
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- Posts: 265
- Joined: Tue 10 Sep 2013 8:40 pm
- Weather Station: Ecowitt GW1003 (GW1000)
- Operating System: Raspbian 10 (Buster) / Mono 6.12
- Location: Freiston, Lincolnshire, UK
- Contact:
Re: Ecowitt Accuracy
Mapantz & galfert,
I bought this as a complete kit so would have thought that if the WH32 was needed it would have been included. I did post some concerns in the forum somewhere about the temp / hum sensor being a little exposed and I think the response was "sometimes you have to make a small sacrifice", sorry cant find the post but I accepted that. However based on the graphs I posted its pretty near to official figures, even though it is stuck on the end of a 10ft pole. I think I responded by saying that if its a problem I can always get a WH32 and radiation shield.
The WS view app picks the WS80 reading for temp & hum as "Outdoor Readings" on the live data screen so can only assume it can be used for this purpose along with calculating more accurate wind information. I guess only time will tell. Will monitor the graphs a gain in a week or so and post them. Will be interesting tos see.
Andy
I bought this as a complete kit so would have thought that if the WH32 was needed it would have been included. I did post some concerns in the forum somewhere about the temp / hum sensor being a little exposed and I think the response was "sometimes you have to make a small sacrifice", sorry cant find the post but I accepted that. However based on the graphs I posted its pretty near to official figures, even though it is stuck on the end of a 10ft pole. I think I responded by saying that if its a problem I can always get a WH32 and radiation shield.
The WS view app picks the WS80 reading for temp & hum as "Outdoor Readings" on the live data screen so can only assume it can be used for this purpose along with calculating more accurate wind information. I guess only time will tell. Will monitor the graphs a gain in a week or so and post them. Will be interesting tos see.
Andy
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- Posts: 1819
- Joined: Sat 17 Dec 2011 11:55 am
- Weather Station: Davis Vantage Pro2
- Operating System: Windows 11 x64
- Location: Dorset - UK
- Contact:
Re: Ecowitt Accuracy
Negative. I bought a console, anemometer, rain gauge, PM2.5 sensor, soil moisture sensor in one hit. I also bought some sensors to place as extras. It was a good job I did, as the station doesn't come with an outdoor temp/humidity sensor.
I posted about this last May on wxforum, as it is all rather confusing.
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- Posts: 265
- Joined: Tue 10 Sep 2013 8:40 pm
- Weather Station: Ecowitt GW1003 (GW1000)
- Operating System: Raspbian 10 (Buster) / Mono 6.12
- Location: Freiston, Lincolnshire, UK
- Contact:
Re: Ecowitt Accuracy
Water01 and Hans R
http://www.ecowitt.com
Take your pick of equipment from there, either buy a complete station or mix and max your sesnors.
You 100% need a GW1000 as this is whats talks to Cumulus.
I bought the GW1003 http://www.ecowitt.com/weather_station/118.html which contains:
GW1000: measures indoor temp, indoor humidity and pressure - also communicates with Cumulus via local wi-fi network
WS80: Ultrasonic Wind Speed&Direction, Solar Radiation & Light, Temp & Humidity 6-in-1 Sensor
Rain Gauge
WH57: Lightning Detector
The bad news is that they are not generally avaialble outside US, Canada and Australia although Froggitt sell some pieces.
All sesnors come it 3 transmitting frequencies 915/868/433Mhz and you need to ensure all your pieces are on the same frequency.
Mine is 868, for the UK the options are 868 or 433. If you but direct from Amazon US you will get the 915Mhz version which is technically illegal in the UK as it interferes with mobile phone signals.
If you speak with Lucy at Ecowitt (Email: support@ecowitt.com / ecowittweather@outlook.com) she is extremely helpful and will help.
The only downside is that it ships direct from HK so there are shipping charges and also you will be liable to import duties / taxes. Again, speak with Lucy, she will help out.
Andy
http://www.ecowitt.com
Take your pick of equipment from there, either buy a complete station or mix and max your sesnors.
You 100% need a GW1000 as this is whats talks to Cumulus.
I bought the GW1003 http://www.ecowitt.com/weather_station/118.html which contains:
GW1000: measures indoor temp, indoor humidity and pressure - also communicates with Cumulus via local wi-fi network
WS80: Ultrasonic Wind Speed&Direction, Solar Radiation & Light, Temp & Humidity 6-in-1 Sensor
Rain Gauge
WH57: Lightning Detector
The bad news is that they are not generally avaialble outside US, Canada and Australia although Froggitt sell some pieces.
All sesnors come it 3 transmitting frequencies 915/868/433Mhz and you need to ensure all your pieces are on the same frequency.
Mine is 868, for the UK the options are 868 or 433. If you but direct from Amazon US you will get the 915Mhz version which is technically illegal in the UK as it interferes with mobile phone signals.
If you speak with Lucy at Ecowitt (Email: support@ecowitt.com / ecowittweather@outlook.com) she is extremely helpful and will help.
The only downside is that it ships direct from HK so there are shipping charges and also you will be liable to import duties / taxes. Again, speak with Lucy, she will help out.
Andy
- HansR
- Posts: 5964
- Joined: Sat 20 Oct 2012 6:53 am
- Weather Station: GW1100 (WS80/WH40)
- Operating System: Raspberry OS/Bookworm
- Location: Wagenborgen (NL)
- Contact:
Re: Ecowitt Accuracy
Ok. Thnx.
Hans
https://meteo-wagenborgen.nl
CMX build 4017+ ● RPi 3B+ ● Raspbian Linux 6.1.21-v7+ armv7l ● dotnet 8.0.3
https://meteo-wagenborgen.nl
CMX build 4017+ ● RPi 3B+ ● Raspbian Linux 6.1.21-v7+ armv7l ● dotnet 8.0.3
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- Posts: 265
- Joined: Tue 10 Sep 2013 8:40 pm
- Weather Station: Ecowitt GW1003 (GW1000)
- Operating System: Raspbian 10 (Buster) / Mono 6.12
- Location: Freiston, Lincolnshire, UK
- Contact:
Re: Ecowitt Accuracy
Mapantz,
Maybe I need to rephrase. If you buy one of the "bundles" in the Weather Stations section on the Ecowitt site http://www.ecowitt.com/weather_station/ they all appear to have the ability to measure outdoor temperature / humidity either buit in or a sensor is supplied. The majoity have sensors built in with the exception of GW1002 and HP3501 which use the WS68 WIFI Weather Sensor Series -- Wireless Solar Powered Anemometer with Light & UV Sensor but a temperature / humidity sensor is provided although you probably need to buy a RS-00001 - Ecowitt Temperature and Humidity Solar Radiation Shield.
I admit it is a bit tricky and care needs to be taken in buying the individual parts not as part of a "bundle" as its not 100% clear.
Basic requirements therefore are:
GW1000
If purchasing a WS68 Anemometer you also need to purchase a WH32 WIFI Weather Sensor Series -- Outdoor Temperature and Humidity Sensor Plus a RS-00001Radiation Shield
If purchasing a WS80 Anenometer you do not need a WH32 or RS-00001
All the other sensor, air quality, lightning, soil , rain etc will work regardless
Hopefully the above info will help.
Maybe I need to rephrase. If you buy one of the "bundles" in the Weather Stations section on the Ecowitt site http://www.ecowitt.com/weather_station/ they all appear to have the ability to measure outdoor temperature / humidity either buit in or a sensor is supplied. The majoity have sensors built in with the exception of GW1002 and HP3501 which use the WS68 WIFI Weather Sensor Series -- Wireless Solar Powered Anemometer with Light & UV Sensor but a temperature / humidity sensor is provided although you probably need to buy a RS-00001 - Ecowitt Temperature and Humidity Solar Radiation Shield.
I admit it is a bit tricky and care needs to be taken in buying the individual parts not as part of a "bundle" as its not 100% clear.
Basic requirements therefore are:
GW1000
If purchasing a WS68 Anemometer you also need to purchase a WH32 WIFI Weather Sensor Series -- Outdoor Temperature and Humidity Sensor Plus a RS-00001Radiation Shield
If purchasing a WS80 Anenometer you do not need a WH32 or RS-00001
All the other sensor, air quality, lightning, soil , rain etc will work regardless
Hopefully the above info will help.
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- Posts: 265
- Joined: Tue 10 Sep 2013 8:40 pm
- Weather Station: Ecowitt GW1003 (GW1000)
- Operating System: Raspbian 10 (Buster) / Mono 6.12
- Location: Freiston, Lincolnshire, UK
- Contact:
Re: Ecowitt Accuracy
One other thing to note and a bit of a downside. The Ecowitt equipment does not provide logging, so if for any reason your power goes down, you have internal wi-fi issues or if you power your Cumulus set up off overnight you will lose data. I run mine on a Raspberry Pi and leave on all the time as it literally costs pennies to run and have done for several years.
Andy
Andy
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- Posts: 1819
- Joined: Sat 17 Dec 2011 11:55 am
- Weather Station: Davis Vantage Pro2
- Operating System: Windows 11 x64
- Location: Dorset - UK
- Contact:
Re: Ecowitt Accuracy
I still think you should buy a separate sensor for temp/humidity. I don't know how high your anemometer is set to, but temp records will be rather skewed during high (25°C +) and low (below zero) temperatures.
I certainly wouldn't trust it for general temperature records - if accuracy is your thing.
I certainly wouldn't trust it for general temperature records - if accuracy is your thing.
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- Posts: 2477
- Joined: Wed 08 Jun 2011 11:19 am
- Weather Station: Davis Vantage Pro 2 + Ecowitt
- Operating System: GNU/Linux Ubuntu 22.04 LXC
- Location: Alcaston, Shropshire, UK
- Contact:
Re: Ecowitt Accuracy
Daytime temperatures won't really be affected, but nighttime temperatures will - especially on clear and still nights (regardless of absolute temperature values).
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- Posts: 265
- Joined: Tue 10 Sep 2013 8:40 pm
- Weather Station: Ecowitt GW1003 (GW1000)
- Operating System: Raspbian 10 (Buster) / Mono 6.12
- Location: Freiston, Lincolnshire, UK
- Contact:
Re: Ecowitt Accuracy
Thanks for the info.
It hasnt been exposed to any "extreme" weather yet +23C max and +3C min so will certainly keep an eye on it and track it against Holbeach. If it fluctuates greatly then I wil look into getting a WH32 as you suggest but if it stays fairly much inline I will leave as is.
Its currently up at around 15ft (10ft pole mounted off the back of my shed) as its in quite an open location but there are plans to increase it in 5ft steps. The pole I used came in 2 x 5ft sections and I have another one available but will need to add them 1 section at a time as already the household inspector of building works (aka "the wife" ) is starting to raise minor objections, especially as I had to internally reinforce the shed in order to take 2 x heavy duty mounting brackets as each section of pole weighs around 2.5Kg. It doesnt wobble in the wind though. I was watching during the 35mph gusts on Sunday and didnt see any major movement.
Andy
It hasnt been exposed to any "extreme" weather yet +23C max and +3C min so will certainly keep an eye on it and track it against Holbeach. If it fluctuates greatly then I wil look into getting a WH32 as you suggest but if it stays fairly much inline I will leave as is.
Its currently up at around 15ft (10ft pole mounted off the back of my shed) as its in quite an open location but there are plans to increase it in 5ft steps. The pole I used came in 2 x 5ft sections and I have another one available but will need to add them 1 section at a time as already the household inspector of building works (aka "the wife" ) is starting to raise minor objections, especially as I had to internally reinforce the shed in order to take 2 x heavy duty mounting brackets as each section of pole weighs around 2.5Kg. It doesnt wobble in the wind though. I was watching during the 35mph gusts on Sunday and didnt see any major movement.
Andy