Dear WeatherCat weather station design consultants,
Between my own desperate reconfiguration of my own station and helping xairbusdriver get his station up and running, I've been paying more attention to the diverse ways a station can be put together. Professional grade stations like Davis Instruments have many more potential configurations than are commonly used and being aware of that can avoid what would otherwise be a awkward installation.
I thought it might be interesting to start up a thread for other weather station installations that we learn about and find interesting for some reason. It could be an installation described on a web site or another weather-related forum. It could be something in a book, magazine, or other reference material. One more possible source are other weather station installations that you encounter in daily life. This is what I will contribute to get this thread off the ground. Today I saw this Ambient Weather station:

Yes, the iron bars represent vertical so this poor station is leaning over quite a bit! I don't know if this counts as
bad or
ugly, but
you'all can be the judge! The attempt isn't completely misguided. The owner was trying to get the station as high as he/she could. Obviously, he/she wasn't willing to commit to a sturdy enough support and the station is suffering as a result.
I thought it would be interesting for us to critique such setups and try to imagine what could be done that would be better. That way when we get our next station installation
"customer," we'll be even more skilled and helpful.
So, does anybody else know of other weather station installations that are either:
good, bad, or
ugly?Cheers, Edouard
![Cheers [cheers1]](https://athena.trixology.com/Smileys/default/food-smiley-004.gif)
P.S. If you find a weather station just out in public show the respect to preserve the people's privacy. We can learn from other people attempts without being noisy. That's why some of the photo is burred out, so avoid leaving enough the scene so that the house might be identified.