Netatmo Personal Weather Station for iOS and Android – Review

Netatmo is a weather station and air quality monitor for your iPhone, iPad or Android mobile device. It comprises of two cylindrical sensor units, one for outside your house and one for inside.

Setting it Up – The instructions point out that you’ll need to find somewhere undercover for the outdoor unit as it shouldn’t get too wet. This seems strange request for a outdoor weather sensor.  Luckily we have an ideal area where our roof extends a few feet over our house.

This was one of the easiest installs for any system we’ve ever reviewed.  Although the exterior sensor must be fixed, there’s a clever little velcro strap in the box so we had it mounted to some guttering in a couple of minutes (there’s a wall plug and screw in the kit too if you prefer).

netatmo-outside

The smaller outdoor module is battery powered (manufactures claim 6-12 months on one set) and it sends its data to the larger indoor cylinder using RF. The unit inside is powered from a mains USB adaptor (included) and connects to your Wi-Fi network.  It passes on the outside measurements to your personal online Netatmo account as well as the indoor data it records too.  You can configure all this from an iPhone, iPad, Mac, Windows or Linux PC.

Using the System – Netatmo measures temperature and humidity for inside and out as well as inside atmospheric pressure, CO2 and sound levels.  The easiest way to see your data is from the free mobile apps.  In addition to the actual reading from your station, Netatmo supplement your app with rainfall, wind and weather forecast data from your area using the location data you supply during the setup process.

netatmo-monitor

You can add alerts so you will be informed every time the data crosses a threshold you specify   For example you might like a push notification each time the outside temperature falls below freezing.  A nice way to test the system is to blow into the indoor senor.  The sudden increase in CO2 will show a spike on the graph in the app as well as pushing an alert to your phone about the sudden change in air quality.

netatmo-c02-bnetatmo-c02-a

The system takes a series of measurements automatically every 5 mins. You can also force a manual update by touching the top of the indoor module.

netatmo-inside-temperature

Doing More with your Data – Many shiny new digital home systems capture your data and forget to allow you to access it in other ways.  Thankfully Netatmo have thought of this and allow you to export your data (CSV or Excel format) to explore and crunch.  In addition the system has an API to allow third party developers to design new apps. An example is baratmo which allows you to see your netatmo stations’ data directly in your Mac’s menubar.  We also noticed a forum post on possible xPL support coming in the future too.  You can share your account with an email invite to a friend or by using your social network contacts (Facebook, Twitter, Google+ or Linkedin).  You can also opt in to contribute your data to a growing global air quality monitoring network.

netatmo-spreadsheet-csv   netatmo-export

Summing Up – Netatmo is easy to setup and install.  It provides a simple way to view your outdoor weather, albeit relying on external rainfall and wind speed data.  In addition it provides a range of measurement of indoor comfort levels and air quality and can send push notifications based on your trigger levels.  It also allows you to easily export your data too. It’s definitely a system that could have the whole family’s interest piqued in the subject and certainly has educational value as well as a certain cool factor.

Available from Amazon

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www.netatmo.com  :   Weather Stations on Amazon

Last update on 2024-11-08 / Affiliate links / Images from Amazon Product Advertising API

4 Comments on "Netatmo Personal Weather Station for iOS and Android – Review"

  1. £160 is a bit steep for the average user.

    My experience so far is that ive had three weather stations and none of them cost less than £100 pounds and all three broke within 18 months and its always the outdoor sensor.

    The last one I had I tried to weather protect it as much as I could without interfering with what it was designed for and that lasted only seven months.
    And they have all gone faulty through condensation.

  2. Actually, £160 is very cheap for a weather station! However, what use is a weather station without wind speed, direction and rain gauge?

    My weather station (a Davis Vantage Pro) was nearly £1000 about 8 years ago but it is a “semi professional” unit and hasn’t skipped a beat, despite being mounted 2.5 M above my tallest chimney!

    As always, you get what you pay for and frankly, you’re not paying much for this . . .

  3. You get indoor and outdoor temperature and humidity, barometric Pressure, indoor CO2 concentration and sound level (I do not see if indoor or outdoor) in addition to the smart phone app.

    You can currently get one for £155 with the shipping.

    I think that it is a not bad deal when you accept that you do not own data collected and they can monitor your presence at home (based on CO2 meter readings) and you believe that the company exists still in 10 years to host your data.

  4. Rabih brahim | November 2, 2013 at 1:07 pm |

    still missing the basic requirment for home automation , in minimum , they should allow direct connection through telnet !

    or having an option that allow you to auto export the csv files.

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