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Where is anenometer found?

Updated: 8/21/2019
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Q: Where is anenometer found?
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Related questions

What does the anenometer measures?

Windspeed


What measures wind speed in mph?

The Anenometer.


How does an anenometer work?

not sure just know it measures wind speed


5 instruments of weather and their function?

barometer and anenometer and theremometer and hygrometer and weather vane


What weather tool would be used to record 318mph?

The weather tool that would be used to measure 318 mph would be a anenometer which measures windspeed. Hope this helped! :)


What are the components of an anemometer?

This is something I believe that is better to leave it to the wikipedia article on the anenometer. There are varios types and you should get the whole information. So go to the related links box below for the article.


How can you make a homemade instrument to measure how fast the wind is going?

The insturment you mean is called an "anenometer". The rotor that catches the wind normally consists of 3 or 4 equally-sized hollow hemispheres about 3" / 75mm diameter, each attached to an arm perhaps 8" / 200mm long extending radially and equally-spaced from a small hub on a vertical spindle. You could probably use old tennis balls or similar to make the cups. The tricky bit is recording the speed, and for that you need a suitable tachometer ("rev. counter") This has to be calibrated so that you know the relationship between actual wind speed and the rpm of the rotor. I you assume (possibly not entirely accurtately) that the peripheral speed of the rotor = the wind speed then it's a simple matter to calculate the wind speed from the rpm, using our old friend Circumference =pi X Diameter. Good luck - if I needed an anenometer I'd find it rather easier to buy one and know the readings will be in mph or km/h and be reasonably accurate!


How do measure cfm in room?

I use an instrument called a "moving van anenometer" to measure velocity of the airflow in feet per minute. I take multiple readings at each register, average them, and multiply them by a percentage factor based on the "free area" of the register to obtain a volume reading in cubic feet per minute. Then I add up the CFM (cubic feet per minute) of each supply register in the room to determine the total air supply to that room.The HVAC Veteran


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