Howdy Herb and WeatherCat . . . .
goin' about it da' hard way types . . . .
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You say the temp/humidity sensor is wired? To the ISS? I don't understand.
Well, . . . . it is a long story. Before getting my Davis station I had an Oregon Scientific 968. That station allows has 3 separate modules: temperature humidity, rain gauge and anemometer. I was aware of the radiation shield problem and so I put the temperature humidity sensor under our deck. So even with an inexpensive station, I was getting decent temperature readings.
Alas, after 2 years anemometer failed on the Oregon Scientific station. At that point I was hooked and decided to buy a Davis station. However, the FARS stations were new and expensive and I wasn't sure I trusted that system. I had a fool-proof radiation shield and decided to stick to my location under the deck. So I bought a
Davis 6382 Wireless Temperature/Humidity Station and wanted to use that data as my official temperature station. Just one problem - you can't! Davis expects the first temperature to be your official temperature and LWC (this is pre-WeatherCat) couldn't swap channels. So there I was, I had a standard radiation shield ISS over a concrete walkway and I had a second Temperature/Humidity probe, but I couldn't connect it to the ISS.
So I did a little more digging and discovered that you can splice the cable to the probe and therefore run a much longer cable from the ISS to wherever you want your Temperature/Humidity probe. So I bought myself 100 feet of 6 conductor phone cable and extended the cable from under the deck to the ISS which is on the other side of the house. I explain all this in my posting about my station:
http://athena.trixology.com/index.php?topic=969.0So I won't repeat the whole story.
However the important point is that Temperature/Humidity probe under the deck is plugged into the ISS temperature/humidity port. While the Temperature/Humidity probe that is on the ISS was also spliced and that signal is sent to the transmitter that came with the Davis 6382 kit.
It has been working fine since 2009 so I'm not going to change it. However, in the 5 years since I first did all this the FARS stations have proven themselves. If I had to replace the ISS I would use a FARS unit and simply things.
So, that's why there is 100 foot of phone cable in between my ISS and the Temperature/Humidity probe.
S-s-s-s-simple, . . . . isn't it!! 
Cheers, Edouard
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