SectionGlossaryTermWeather Station
Quick Answers
  • Definition and core components of a weather station
  • Professional vs personal/hobby station differences
  • Common instrument types and measurement parameters
  • How stations connect to publishing software like GraphWeather
  • The role of citizen weather observers in data networks

Definition

A weather station is a facility or instrument package that measures atmospheric conditions at a specific location. At minimum, a weather station records temperature and precipitation. More complete stations measure barometric pressure, humidity, wind speed and direction, solar radiation, UV index, and soil moisture. For a comprehensive overview of weather station types and their history, see the Weather station article on Wikipedia.

Station Types

Professional Stations

Operated by national meteorological services (such as MΓ©tΓ©o-France, NOAA, or the UK Met Office), professional stations follow strict WMO siting and calibration standards. Instruments are maintained on a regular schedule, placed at standardised heights, and positioned away from obstructions. Data from these stations feeds into forecast models and climate records.

Personal and Hobby Stations

Personal weather stations (PWS) are consumer or semi-professional instruments installed at homes, schools, or small businesses. Common brands include Davis Instruments (Vantage series), La Crosse Technology (WS-2300, WS-3600), Oregon Scientific (WMR series), and Ecowitt/Fine Offset. These stations connect to a base console that displays readings and can export data via USB, serial, or network connections.

While personal stations rarely meet professional siting standards β€” rooftop installations are common, and nearby buildings create microclimate effects β€” they still provide valuable hyperlocal data when properly calibrated and maintained.

Core Instruments

Connecting to Publishing Software

Personal weather stations connect to publishing software like GraphWeather through several pathways:

Regardless of the connection method, the publishing workflow follows the same pattern: read data β†’ process and validate β†’ apply to templates β†’ generate graphs β†’ upload to web server. See Publishing Fundamentals for the complete workflow.