I like this project!  I'm attempting to do a similar video concept to 
support WX observation conditions at an observatory using a upward looking 
camera with a fisheye lens to shown visibility conditions.  Are the details 
of your RPi camera setup available?  I'm also trying to create a telescope 
eyepiece that would stream the video so that the observation viewed on the 
large 10" refractor telescope could be displayed on a monitor in the 
observatory or the internet.

On Thursday, January 2, 2020 at 7:31:10 PM UTC-5, Alex Edwards wrote:
>
> Happy 2020 everyone. Just another weather / webcam project, but hopefully 
> a bit different 
>
> Its a solar powered Raspberry Pi Zero WH, together with FineOffset WS2080 
> weather station, Pi Camera 1.3, 3G MiFi, EPever LS1024B solar controller, 
> 26Ah battery (2nd hand) and 40W solar panel. Components placed in a 
> UV-resistant plastic box to survive nasty NZ sun. Its all on a slighyl 
> remote hill paddock overlooking the Bay of Islands in New Zealand.
>
> You can see the output here: 
> https://horsetrekn.co.nz/paihia-weather-cam-bay-of-islands 
> <https://horsetrekn.co.nz/paihia-weather-cam-bay-of-islands?fbclid=IwAR09ezC04UHcHfqlSi_OOJkqnfi2BQV2yllYH9zQHTNV2ZykoalOfmIGy-A>
>  
> - WeeWX links at the bottom of the page.
>
> The idea is to take photos of the weather, but also of the nice view and 
> any horses roaming around the hill paddock. The Pi currently uploads a 
> new photo every 5 minutes to our webserver, and some basic JSON weather 
> data as a very minimal WeeWX report. 
>
> Once a day it uploads weather and solar power charts, generated using 2 
> WeeWX daemons. After weeks creating some EPever / EPsolar drivers, I 
> spotted Mattew Wall had done something similar exactly the same time. I've 
> modified that driver for my needs and created a straight forward skin. I'll 
> upload my stuff to Github when its tidied a bit more. I also spent way 
> too long creating other MODBUS 'map' style drivers I may upload too, or 
> modify the driver to use - they were working well :) 
>
> The idea of the 40W panel and quite large battery is the Pi should be able 
> to keep running for around 5 days during winter/stormy weather, and 
> overnight too for weather data. The setup could survive for 24hrs or so 
> using a 7Ah battery and smaller panel. I've got the Pi's box stacked on 
> another to get a better view, and using a 2nd hand barrel as a platform 
> which I'll part fill with water for stability.
>
> I wonder about creating a more generic 'solar' project for WeeWX that 
> could handle different solar controller 'drivers'? I also wonder about 
> including a dummy 'solar driver' as an example in WeeWX?
>
> Next steps - 
> * Raise camera a bit using a 2m camera cable on a pole.
> * Consider uploading WeeWX data more frequenty, possibly to another WeeWX 
> process on the webserver which can then create the charts etc.
> * Provide an album and timelapse video of recent images. I already do this 
> on the Pi, but not on the website.
>
> Some tips learned along the way :-
>
> * Mozjpeg does a great job at compressing JPEGs more, especially with 
> ms-ssim tuning, key to saving mobile data etc. Other compression techniques 
> took too long for debatable improvement.
> * The Pi seemed unreliable reading USB serial data, until I read about 
> using a powered hub. Even though the USB load is quite low, this seems to 
> help stability a lot. The hub is powered from a dual 12V-5V USB loom from 
> the controller, the other USB powering the Pi.
> * The Pi Camera 1.3 seems A LOT nicer to use than the v2 - at least the 
> versions I got. Less resolution, but much nicer colours, better exposure 
> and sharper too.
> * sshReach.me is a handy way to login to the Pi over 3G.
>

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"weewx-user" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/weewx-user/1ed67c35-3d69-4d69-87b6-df18cdf7b6fd%40googlegroups.com.

Reply via email to