Dear WeatherCat
"slick" rain gauge owners,
It is definitely going deluxe, but if you want to make sure to get as accurate a measure of rainfall, you might try coating your rain gauge collector cone with a product like Rain-X:
http://www.rainx.com/product/glass-and-cleaners/rainx-original-glass-treatment/#.VCh6s-flf2EI've been doing this for years and while it doesn't make the drought go away, at least what rain does fall will gets counted.
I had been using Rain-X on the car glass for much longer than I've had a weather station, but recently I discovered a new product for automobile glass: Aquapel:
http://www.aquapel.com/This product was developed by the automobile glass manufacturer PPG Industries and in tests it does appear to last a lot longer on car windshields:
http://www.autoblog.com/2006/04/17/rain-x-versus-ppg-aquapel-grudge-match+/I put it on all our cars last year, but with the drought, I can hardly say if Aquapel really works better or not. I did again this year, we'll see!
My question is whether or not anybody knows of an attempt to use Aquapel on a rain gauge collector cone? Some of you folks hang out on other weather forums so you might have heard something. Since Aquapel appears to be designed specifically for application to automobile glass, my instinct is that Aquapel isn't a good choice for plastic parts and might even do damage. I was curious if anybody had found the answer
da' hard way!!! ![Bang Head [banghead]](https://athena.trixology.com/Smileys/default/banghead.gif)
Cheers, Edouard
![Cheers [cheers1]](https://athena.trixology.com/Smileys/default/food-smiley-004.gif)