I Have just added and Ecowitt GW3000 to my setup.
It is connected to an unheated WS90.
In the web page setup there is a “Temperature Compensation” option.
When should I tick this.
Oh there is also an “Automatic Frequency Control Option” ??
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Latest Cumulus MX V4 release 4.4.5 (build 4088) - 10 April 2025
Latest Cumulus MX V3 release 3.28.6 (build 3283) - 21 March 2024
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GW3000 Temperature Compensation
- The Dalek Hunter
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- Weather Station: Vantage Pro 2, Ecowitt GW2000
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- Posts: 1241
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- Weather Station: Ecowitt GW2000/GW3000
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Re: GW3000 Temperature Compensation
I would suggest taking a search around in the WiKi created by Gyvate (Rainer) and read up on there. The temperature compensation (which is also useable with my WS80) I believe is to do with solar values affecting temperature if I understood correctly and to be honest the Automatic frequency thing I don't use on my gateways either!
Stuart
Stuart
Currently running CMX V4.4.2 4085 on Linux openSUSE Leap
- The Dalek Hunter
- Posts: 370
- Joined: Wed 05 Aug 2020 11:51 am
- Weather Station: Vantage Pro 2, Ecowitt GW2000
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Re: GW3000 Temperature Compensation
Many thanks - I will take a look
- HansR
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- Weather Station: GW1100 (WS80/WH40)
- Operating System: Raspberry OS/Bookworm
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Re: GW3000 Temperature Compensation
It says (search on Compensation):
I did try it some time ago but noticed no significant effect on the GW1000.Temperature Compensation: Turn on this option to minimize sunlight influence on outdoor temperature measurement if the outdoor temperature and humidity sensor installation site is not ideal. This option works with sensor arrays like WS69, WS80, WS90 and WS85.
Hans
https://meteo-wagenborgen.nl
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https://meteo-wagenborgen.nl
CMX build 4088+ ● RPi 4B Rev 1.5 ● 6.12.20+rpt-rpi-v8 aarch64 (bookworm) ● dotnet 8.0.1
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- Gyvate
- Posts: 388
- Joined: Wed 16 Dec 2020 2:14 pm
- Weather Station: GW1x00/WH2650/HP2553/GW2000/3000
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Re: GW3000 Temperature Compensation
depending on your conditions this is quite possible -HansR wrote: ↑Mon 07 Apr 2025 7:48 am It says (search on Compensation):I did try it some time ago but noticed no significant effect on the GW1000.Temperature Compensation: Turn on this option to minimize sunlight influence on outdoor temperature measurement if the outdoor temperature and humidity sensor installation site is not ideal. This option works with sensor arrays like WS69, WS80, WS90 and WS85.
the algorithm is
Outdoor_Temp = Outdoor_Temp - CorrectionT
CorrectionT = solar_rad/ (10*cp*k* sqrt(u/0.0009)) {solar irradiation in W/m2 units]
where cp and k are empirically determined constants and u is gust in m/s units and is the bigger value among 0.5m/s or actual gust
cp: 29.3, k: 0.0984
and it definitely has a temperature compensating (reducing) influence at higher solar radiation values
at 700 W/m2 and no wind (or <= 0.5 m/s) it reduces the temperature by 1° C, at 1,000 W/m2 by ~1.5° C
at 10 m/s gust the reduction would be ~0.2 °C (at 700 W/m2) and ~0.3 °C (at 1,000 W/m2)
it makes sense that the reduction is bigger at low wind speeds and less at higher ones
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- HansR
- Posts: 7025
- Joined: Sat 20 Oct 2012 6:53 am
- Weather Station: GW1100 (WS80/WH40)
- Operating System: Raspberry OS/Bookworm
- Location: Wagenborgen (NL)
- Contact:
Re: GW3000 Temperature Compensation
@Gyvate: Thanks, that is useful.Gyvate wrote: ↑Wed 09 Apr 2025 8:46 pmdepending on your conditions this is quite possible -HansR wrote: ↑Mon 07 Apr 2025 7:48 am It says (search on Compensation):I did try it some time ago but noticed no significant effect on the GW1000.Temperature Compensation: Turn on this option to minimize sunlight influence on outdoor temperature measurement if the outdoor temperature and humidity sensor installation site is not ideal. This option works with sensor arrays like WS69, WS80, WS90 and WS85.
the algorithm is
Outdoor_Temp = Outdoor_Temp - CorrectionT
CorrectionT = solar_rad/ (10*cp*k* sqrt(u/0.0009)) {solar irradiation in W/m2 units]
where cp and k are empirically determined constants and u is gust in m/s units and is the bigger value among 0.5m/s or actual gust
cp: 29.3, k: 0.0984
and it definitely has a temperature compensating (reducing) influence at higher solar radiation values
at 700 W/m2 and no wind (or <= 0.5 m/s) it reduces the temperature by 1° C, at 1,000 W/m2 by ~1.5° C
at 10 m/s gust the reduction would be ~0.2 °C (at 700 W/m2) and ~0.3 °C (at 1,000 W/m2)
it makes sense that the reduction is bigger at low wind speeds and less at higher ones
Hans
https://meteo-wagenborgen.nl
CMX build 4088+ ● RPi 4B Rev 1.5 ● 6.12.20+rpt-rpi-v8 aarch64 (bookworm) ● dotnet 8.0.1
BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/wagenborgenwx.bsky.social
https://meteo-wagenborgen.nl
CMX build 4088+ ● RPi 4B Rev 1.5 ● 6.12.20+rpt-rpi-v8 aarch64 (bookworm) ● dotnet 8.0.1
BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/wagenborgenwx.bsky.social