Dear WeatherCat fastidious weather station maintainers,
Okay, I "walked the walk" and did the annual maintenance of my station this morning. I always replace all batteries once a year, and decided to check the voltage just to know how far down the batteries had gone. I was surprised by one result. Here is what I found:
Davis ISS station Lithium 123 battery: 3.55 volts
Davis Console "C" battery: 1.55 volts
Davis Weather Envoy "AA" battery: 1.55 volts.
Now both the Console and Envoy receive household current 24/7, so those batteries only work during power outages and we haven't any long power outages. However, I was surprised at how little voltage drop I observed in the ISS battery. I don't have any way to test a 3 volt battery under load, so this is a bit of a deceiving measurement. Still I have the Davis Wireless Temperature/Humidity Station (#6382) and I have to replace that battery every 4 months. The Davis Vantage Pro-2 abandoned having a battery that can be recharged, so the solar panel only provides power for daytime operation. Since that is less than 50% of the time, you would expect that the 123 battery would be significantly used up if the power used was comparable to the 6382 station. I suppose the Davis ISS is more efficient than the 6382 and that explains the longer battery life.
It certainly seems that you could wait 2 years or more before replacing this battery. However, it is too much of a hassle to keep track of that for me. Also, I think it is a good idea to replace the batteries every year to reduce the risk of a battery going bad and leaking.
However, it is a free country!!
Cheers, Edouard
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