🌍 Elevate Your Weather Game!
The Logia 18-in-1 Wi-Fi Weather Station is a comprehensive monitoring system that provides real-time environmental data, including temperature, humidity, wind speed, and UV exposure. With a user-friendly indoor console and Wi-Fi connectivity, it allows for seamless integration with mobile apps and web services, ensuring you stay informed about the weather conditions in your home and backyard.
Sensor Technology | Radio Frequency (RF) and various environmental sensors |
Are batteries included? | Yes |
Frequency | 915 MHz |
Display Type | LED |
Connectivity Technology | Wi-Fi |
Number of Batteries | 1 CR2 batteries required. (included) |
Temperature Accuracy | 0.5 °C |
Power Source | Corded Electric |
Additional Features | Barometric Pressure, Professional, Wi-Fi, Indoor and Outdoor, All in One |
O**.
Easy Setup If You Have Basic Networking Skills
I was a little worried about the negative reviews regarding internet setup -- those worries were unfounded. The setup is very straightforward with only one minor gotcha. My steps went like this:1: put batteries in the sensors.2: plug in the base unit. Wait a few moments and the sensors all automagically pair.3: put the base unit into AP mode so that it becomes in essence a wifi router (press and hold wifi button on back for 6 seconds -- the display then says "AP").4: connect to the device's SSID with a laptop or phone (the SSID will start PWS...). You won't have any outside internet access when connected to the base unit this way, which makes sense because it isn't connected to anything but your laptop/phone. The reason you connect this way is so you give the base unit the info it needs to connect to your home router and a couple other config details. The form is obvious, clean, and simple.5: once connected to the base unit via wifi, enter the base unit's address in your browser (192.168.1.1). A simple form will show up and you can select your home wifi's SSID and enter the password. You can also enter Wunderground account info, time zone, select a time server, and enter GPS coordinates for the device.5a. I would suggest having your Wunderground account setup first, otherwise you will have to repeat the process by putting the device in AP mode, connecting to it, etc. The gotcha I noted was that when you go into AP mode, it does not remember the last home wifi SSID you picked, so you have to reselect the correct SSID. If you don't, it will of course fail to connect because it is giving the wrong router your password. When you signup for Wunderground, you will get a page that shows the info you need to fill in on the two fields you get when the base unit is in AP mode. Just copy and paste. Wunderground will also give you your GPS coordinates.5b. When you choose your time zone, I found that the sunrise/sunset time was wrong when I entered the UTC info for regular time, and correct when I used the DST time (I'm in Pacific zone so correct was UTC -8).6. Once you've entered all the info to the device and press submit, it drops out of AP mode and tries to connect to your home wifi. If you entered all the correct info, it happens in seconds and it's easy to tell from the front of the display -- if the wifi icon blinks, not connected. Solid, you are connected. If you fail to connect, go through the AP process again and ensure you have selected the correct SSID for your home router.The first time I went through this it probably took me half an hour because I did it piece by piece, including setting up my Wunderground account, while carefully reading the directions. If I was to blank it out and start over, it would take me less than five minutes now. It's a very straightforward process. There is another weather service like Wunderground in the setup screen for which I can't recall the name. I didn't try that one because once I set up the Wunderground info, the device started reporting immediately. It appears to update Wunderground about four times per minute.Anyway, I love it so far. Only had it a day so I can't talk about longevity, but I can say the setup is about as easy and straightforward as can be without having a keyboard and general purpose monitor built directly into the base unit. I think Logia's solution to getting the necessary info stored on the device is a very good one.
J**A
Weather Data Galore
This product is working very well for me. It takes some thought and work to set up the outside unit and a little time to familiarize yourself with the set up, pairing, and settings menu for the display. But the Instruction book is adequate. Two complaints which are not deal breakers. 1. I could not get weather underground (WU) to recognize my station as "online" after I registered it. This may have been because the Logia 7 in 1 does not appear in their menu when registering. This meant I had to go with Weather Cloud (WC) which is not quite as convenient as WU for remote monitoring on your phone because you have to pull up the website with your phone browser and log in every time rather than having the app with a home-screen icon that WU offers. WC does not offer an APP for your phone. 2. The display offers the ability to toggle between daily, weekly or monthly rainfall totals. This is a very nice feature. I just wish they had something similar in the max/min menu for temperature and wind speed where you could select the max/min for the past 24 hours and perhaps for the month too. Temperatures fluctuate diurnally and that is where the temperature max/min is most interesting to me. As it is the unit just stores the max min value forever until you reset it. For example you might be seeing a max temp of 95F which was from last summer even though it is now winter if you don't reset it. The max/min value is stored until you reset it and you have to reset every parameter individually (i.e. it is not a global reset for all parameters) So if you want max/mins for the past 24 hours for any parameter you have to remember to reset them each day. You can go through the history for the past 24 hours but that does not necessarily give you the max/mins since they are just data points on the hour each hour. A different value can occur at some point between the 1-hour readings (especially for wind speed).Downloading a month of data from WC is easy but it gives it to you in a .csv file which is not very usable. A little research on the web will show you how to convert it to a .xlsx file. WC will store up to 12 months of data for you under the free version of their service with readings for each parameter every hour. Like history on your display this is not necessarily max/min.A picture of my outside unit installation is attached.
T**E
Love the screen is easy to read.
Easy to install. Works Great!!!!
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
1 month ago