WS-GP2 Quick Start Guide v1.0
WS-GP2 Quick Start Guide v1.0
Description
The weather station has a 2m high by 48 mm diameter anodised aluminium mast.
Cross arm, connectors and fittings are provided for sensors and a GP2 data logger.
The mast attaches to the ground via the standard base. This may be pinned to the
ground by the stakes provided or bolted down on to concrete or rock.
M2-BASE
Standard
base
1 Unpacking
Check your contents against your order - you should have:-
M2 mast with cross arm, steel guy ropes, baseplate, stakes, logger canopy, U-
bolts, and GP2 Logger and a logger canopy
See Figure 1 and the Parts Index on page Error! Bookmark not defined.
Wind speed and direction sensor AN-WD2-03
RH and air temperature sensor RHT2nl-03
Solar energy flux sensor ES2-05
Rain gauge RG2+BP-06
Soil Temperature sensor ST1-05
GP2 Logger, with GP2-USB cable and GP2 User Manual
Delta-T Software and Manuals CD including DeltaLINK3
You may need a pickaxe and shovel to prepare the site.
You will need a PC running DeltaLINK3 (supplied with the GP2 logger).
Figure 1: WS-GP2 Weather Station Mast and Sensor Parts (not to scale)
Rules of thumb
Near a building, mount the sensors outside the
zone of influence. Horizontally this extends
roughly twice the height of the building upstream
and ten times downstream. Vertically it extends
to about twice the height of the structure.
If the requirement is to measure the true local
conditions, e.g. a field of newly planted corn,
select a relatively uniform area of the terrain. Be
aware that, as a crop grows up towards the
sensors, the measured wind speed decreases
as the canopy approaches.
Sensors are also influenced by the changing
local thermal and humidity microclimate above
the crop. There are no simple rules to follow –
but be aware of the following:
Clothes line effect: vegetation upwind may
affect vapour gradients and heat transfer.
Oasis effect: If an isolated source of water, e.g.
a lake or glacier, is surrounded by a relatively
arid area, then the relative humidity may be
affected if the wind direction draws air from the
water source.
Leading Edge effect: When air moves over the
boundary between two surfaces that differ in
temperature, moisture content, roughness or
some other characteristic, it takes time for the air
to adjust. The line of discontinuity is known as
the leading edge. The boundary layer will vary in
vertical extent with distance from the leading
edge as it adjusts to the new conditions.
Figure 2: Location
Thermal plume effect: Avoid placing objects
directly under the air humidity and temperature sensor, such as a solar panel, which
can create a rising thermal plume when warmed by the sun.
Figure 4
Steps to
assembly
Step 4. Insert cross arm (19) through connector (18), and secure it by
tightening the locking grub-screw using the M8 Allen key.
Step 7. Attach steel guy wire to the ring bolts using the D-shackles
Step 8. If you have an assistant, now is the time to ask them to hold
the mast vertical. Then, using the steel guy ropes as an
indicator, hammer in the guy rope stakes at 3 locations
around the mast, about 120 cm away from the centre.
If you don’t have an assistant, put two stakes in, haul up the
mast with the third, and position your third stake that way.
Step 9. Hammer the 2 stakes in to attach the mast base
securely to the ground.
Sensor Assembly
Step 12. Attach the RHT2 mounting bracket using the U-bolts
provided.
Mount the RHT2 sensor in the radiation shield using the housing sleeve and
plastic compression nut provided.
Step 13. Attach the ES2 solar radiation sensor to the levelling plate
via a screw into its base.
Level it using the bubble level indicator and lock it in place
using the 22mm ball and socket device spanne
Step 15. Slide the cross arm adapter onto the cross arm.
This requires the 5/32 inch (~4mm) Allen key.
geomag-web/#declination E
90 270
W
S S
...and enter your latitude and 180 180
longitude. Example : How to find true north given a compass
Magnetic declination (or variation) and the angle of magnetic declination
is the angle between magnetic north and true north.
It is positive when the angle measured is east of true north and negative
when west. So, if the declination is positive, true north is left of magnetic
north.
4
Print (Preview)
1. Select the Program window. Factory installed weather stations will have the
WS-GP2 Weather Station Program pre-installed as shown
If missing, to reinstall this program Click Change on the Program window and
select Edit, Import Program, select, WS-GP2 Weather Station Program from the
folder location C:\Program Files\Delta-T\DeltaLINK3.0\WS-GP2 and click OK.
Resize your window and the panels as convenient in order to read them.
This weather station program is just an example to get you started, so please feel
free to alter it.
2. Click on each sensor in the Measurement section of the Properties panel and
observe that information about that sensor appears in the Info Panel.
3. To view the entire Sensor instructions in a separate panel right click over the Info
panel to display “Print Preview” and select it with a right click.
4. To print this use ALT P or click the print icon.
Note also you can run the weather station program connected to the GP2 simulator
without a GP2 logger or weather station present. This is useful for tweaking the
program and seeing the effect of different options on the simulated results graphs.
See also: GP2 User Manual.
Weather Records
9 Collect and Save Logged Data
1. Select the Dataset window. All stored data in the logger will be retrieved and
displayed on the screen (it may take a few seconds to download the data).
Click Refresh if required.
2. Select File, Save to save the data to a dataset file.
3. Select File, Open to open and view a previously saved dataset file.
4. To save a dataset file as a ASCII file for importing into other programs, open the file
in DeltaLINK, and select File, Save As… selecting the appropriate file type to save.
Time of
maximum +1 standard
deviation
Class Rose: % of time speed was in each
Average Beaufort scale range
1
2
Time of -1 standard 3
minimum deviation 4
5
Minimum
6 and greater
Battery Life
Replace the battery before the battery voltage indicator drops below 5.5V.
At 1 reading/ minute on all sensors the internal 6 long life alkaline AA (LR6) batteries
should last one year.
Note the simulator does not accurately predict battery life and should not be relied on.
To increase battery life this, reduce the reading frequency, and/or use an external lead
acid battery or an approved mains-powered 12V DC supply.
You might expect an external 10 AHr lead acid battery to last longer but this is not the
case - the GP2’s input overvoltage regulator for external power sources uses quite a
lot of current (~0.8mA) but also internal self- discharge in the lead acid battery can limit
this - to 10 months at 25°C, and only 3 months at 40°C, unless periodically recharged
– for example by a solar panel.
Note: When retrieving data, keep an eye on your logger battery. Its status is reported
by the logger software, and you can also log it along with the sensor readings. The
voltage reported is that presented to the sensors, and is slightly less than that at the
battery terminals.
Note: If a powered sensor is connected to power bank A or B, then every time any of
those sensors are read, power is supplied to all the sensors on that power bank.