![]() Alternatively, you could house your weather Pi inside and run wires to your weather sensors outside - making use of the nice screen to display readouts. You could install it outside in a suitable weatherproof enclosure (like a Stevenson screen, a waterproof junction box or even a Tupperware container) and connect to it wirelessly - logging the data locally or piping it into Weather Underground, a MQTT broker or a cloud service like Adafruit IO. It will work with any Raspberry Pi with a 40 pin header (that's most of them except the really old ones). The sturdy RJ11 connectors (remember those?) will let you easily attach wind and rain sensors. The onboard sensors can measure temperature, humidity, pressure and light. It has a bright 1.54" LCD screen and four buttons for inputs. Weather HAT is a tidy all-in-one solution for hooking up climate and environmental sensors to a Raspberry Pi. A meteorologically minded Raspberry Pi HAT designed to make hooking up weather sensors a breeze (or a squall, or a gale).
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |