Dear Xipper and WeatherCat station tinkerers,
. . . . what I need to do is find a good way of mounting the transmitter enclosure and solar panel pointing a different direction. It would be great if Davis had made it so that you could mount the enclosure to the 90-degree side of the rain gauge base.
Unfortunately, you've got something of a problem there. First, thing to consider is that you could run your ISS on battery power alone. Without solar power, the station will use a 123 battery about every 4 months. If you are willing to pay
"Herb's battery commission" (buy your batteries in bulk at say Amazon,) that might be the path of least resistance.
If you chose to move the ISS enclosure, keep in mind that you must not under any circumstances increase the length of the cable to the temperature/humidity probe. I found that out
da' hard way! ![Bang Head [banghead]](https://athena.trixology.com/Smileys/default/banghead.gif)
However, you can extend the cables of any other sensor. So you could relocate the temperature/humidity probe and the ISS enclosure and keep your rain gauge where it is with an extended cable. You can buy parts like the base of the rain gauge, so you could simply remount the ISS enclosure on a second base. A good source for Davis parts is Scaled Instruments:
https://www.scaledinstruments.com/There is a video that Davis made showing you how to remove and replace your ISS enclosure:
https://youtu.be/sCN3cuqaEEcThat might give you some ideas of what options you have. I think you might be able to come up with an alternative mounting rid for the ISS enclosure, but it will take some fancy fabrication to do it.
Honestly, if I were in your shoes I would just pay
"Herb's battery commission" and get on with it.
Cheers, Edouard