Even with my AcuRite, my neighbors back in TN were generally "in the ballpark" of mine, but never close enough to ever say they were "accurate" with each other. So, to answer your question.without another station withing a few (8-10') feet of it, I really don't know how you can tell how accurate it is. My main motivation was that I wanted something that had seamless integration with my Rachio irrigation controller. So when we moved to FL I knew I had to make some changes. The movers pretty much just threw it in a box. I had to replace the AcuRite Iris (5 in 1) that I was using in Nashville. I've had very cloudy day on few consecutive days, and the station never went dark. I highly recommend use rechargeable battery, which will also recharge via solar panel. Here's my current dashboard that got the data from WittBoyĮdit: it has capacitor that works great on sunny to cloudy-ish day and will recharge via its builtin solar panel. In the future, you can add more hardware/sensors in the future as well. It has its own temperature and humidity sensor, and reported as indoor sensors. It connects wirelessly (915Mhz in North America) to the base.The base itself supports wireless (2.4Ghz only) or wired. Installing it is very easy, since it's only 1 piece hardware for the sensor, it's all mounted on an 1 inch pole. And on top of that you can choose to push (or not) your data to other sites, such as ecowitt & wunderground. Integration with HA is very easy via integration and all done locally. I have Ecowitt WittBoy during last Amazon Prime day.
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