Ignignokt
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- Jul 20, 2016
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You know - somehow I think this is part of the confusion. Most consumer sensing devices use the cheapest and least robust sensors. Some simply use parallel circuit traces to measure leakage current. I find the sensor on the dehumidifier to be most vexing - it's often off by 20 percentage points. Most of those simple sensing schemes are vulnerable to vapor deposition on the surface that changes the characteristics. The readings we get with most the ~$20 or so meters have numerous error sources and horrible linearity. Another case of getting what you pay for.
The most accurate devices I've found for humidity are the SHT31
https://www.adafruit.com/products/2857
and the BME280
https://www.adafruit.com/products/2652
Obviously, they are both silicon based integrated devices - used for higher end applications. Adafruit has a learning section where they give fundamental usage with Arduino - you could build a few loggers and get better data.
I've put these two, together right next to each other and gotten relatively similar outputs. You've probably noticed they aren't particularly cheap - but cheap enough. I recommend them highly - I don't think you would be disappointed.
The most accurate devices I've found for humidity are the SHT31
https://www.adafruit.com/products/2857
and the BME280
https://www.adafruit.com/products/2652
Obviously, they are both silicon based integrated devices - used for higher end applications. Adafruit has a learning section where they give fundamental usage with Arduino - you could build a few loggers and get better data.
I've put these two, together right next to each other and gotten relatively similar outputs. You've probably noticed they aren't particularly cheap - but cheap enough. I recommend them highly - I don't think you would be disappointed.