How are these readings possible?

86 views
Skip to first unread message

enu...@gmail.com

unread,
May 31, 2021, 5:42:47 AM5/31/21
to weewx-user

If I understand well how weewx works on my station, every 48s a loop packet arrives and I suppose that by making an average of those loop packets every 5 minutes it writes to the database.
How can I have a temperature graph at 20ºC and suddenly find peaks at 43º? That would imply that 6 packets have arrived with data very out of the correct which seems very unlikely, perhaps one for any reason that alters the average somewhat and that I suppose can be filtered with StdQC but how can  be saved in the database a temperature of 43 ° C in 5 minutes.
What is the explanation?

Karen K

unread,
May 31, 2021, 6:01:35 AM5/31/21
to weewx-user
Is that graph about temperature or some aggregation of temperature? That makes a difference. 

You could set debugging to 1 and restart weewx and look into the logging file what it says.

Tom Keffer

unread,
May 31, 2021, 7:59:05 AM5/31/21
to weewx-user
In addition to Karen's suggestions, two other questions:

What kind of hardware? Some hardware generate their own archive records. 

Where is the sensor located? Perhaps the sun is a factor?



--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "weewx-user" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to weewx-user+...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/weewx-user/e3985161-884b-4bbc-987c-07d154b07dc3n%40googlegroups.com.

wfs...@gmail.com

unread,
May 31, 2021, 10:09:50 AM5/31/21
to weewx-user
Isn't the standard behavior for things like temp & humidity to record the most current reading at the end of the interval, not the average over the interval?  So if you observe a spike at/near the end of your archive interval (legitimate or not), that is the value written to the database?

Tom Keffer

unread,
May 31, 2021, 11:31:00 AM5/31/21
to weewx-user
No. Standard behavior is to record the average.

But, like most other things in WeeWX, it can be customized. Accumulators.

Cameron D

unread,
May 31, 2021, 7:37:22 PM5/31/21
to weewx-user
yet another possibility is hardware issues.  I recently had sudden spikes to 65°C, but they were more obviously a hardware fault as they were followed by a few minutes of null data.
Suspects might be developing corrosion in contacts, or creatures traversing the circuit boards.

How frequently is this happening to you?

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages