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1) Anemometer . . .bought one of these a few weeks ago and found I agreed with "comments" left by others . . . which I ignored as being picky. However, the cheap-one I bought had an excellent screen display and Hold function.... but when stationary if you rotate the instrument, the vanes should rotate also, delayed by the friction naturally. But this one showed signs that the vanes were bottom-heavy - as soon as they tried to move they drop-back. Unfortunately there is no way of identifying any vane as a drop of paint would invalidate the Returns Policy.
Next test was to blow gently and determine the wind-speed... several strengths were shown and I have no reason to doubt they are about right.
Don't know but presume holding it outside a car (no-one about!) should show the speed in MPH similar to the car speedometer ( although care with slip-streams. etc).
Using local "Weather reports would be fraught with error, unless a friendly weather-station allowed access to the tower, for real-time comparison.
The reason I returned it was, finally, the inability to achieve a low-reading. The spec suggests down to 0.4m/S but try as I might the lowest it would rotate for showed 2m/s ( although achieving the right placement wasn't easy ). Any lower and the vane would stall after some erratic movement.
Whilst this might be "like a magnetic vane"... I'm fairly sure it is Optical, although viewing it in the dark with my camcorder( as IR detector) showed no light-leaks - although the Zoom lens might be filtering IR.
Another odd fault was that when stalled the display would show 38, or 44m/S and this was quite repeatable . . . very confusing when only a light breeze is present.... i.e when/if Out and About. Zero m/s was sometimes shown, but it was quite random, it seems.
Does anyone have similar experience . . . or suggestions for Re-tests?
This was a cheapo-model, so I wasn't expecting great accuracy... but the out-of-balance and stall-speed struck me as a faulty product. Oddly one of the even-cheaper models offered shows 30m/s as the lowest spec, but then suggests 40 is practical....eh?
I tried to avoid any that use 9v batteries, or CR2032 cells - these are too fiddly and I remove my batteries ( like AAA), when not in use.
Any thoughts on making one's own? I watched a schools-YT which used paper cups . . . but this is suitable for a mast "Weather-Station" experiment.... very difficult to use for air-duct checking.
2) Audio-meter.
Sadly, this cheapo Audio meters was a real failure.
Whilst I cannot comment on "loud" setting, ( jackhammers, Jets take-off ) it would flash as I screwed the lid on a glass "Kilner Jar" - which in a quiet setting should IMHO be about as close to zero as you can get. The spec is not up to the very loudest sounds, so it is intended for comparison in offices, trains, etc. "for interest" - I guess.
The Kilner-Jar experiment showed 40dB . . . the same as going outside after an aircraft had flown away. The snag for me was the spec starts from 30dB - and I would expect lower levels to be inaccurate . . . but NOT unavailable.
The Jar was in my basement, which I know from SDHC recorders is very quiet . . . indeed approaching the point where noise in their preamp is looking at you. ( you have to boost the Volume by 40dB to see anything - I used Sound Forge, but Audacity has similar features.).
----Anyone had similar experiences . . . was my experiment at fault?
The reason for buying was to assess low-levels of audio in a forest, so I might replicate that noise in my basement ( using a playback device, suitably muffled ), for microphone (amplifier) experiments. It being far more convenient than moving the workshop into the woods.
It's such a shame that Manufacturers over-spec. their products, when for many uses their limits would be unnoticed . . .
BTW. Using a reasonably strong fan, the impeller was "run-in" for several hours; face-in and face-out, to give the bearings a preliminary polish. No improvement was discerned!
Thoughts...? |
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