HOBOnet Wireless Analog Mote

The HOBOnet Analog Mote enables users to quickly and easily integrate their preferred/popular 3rd party analog output sensors with the HOBOnet remote sensor network.

Features

  • Supports and connects up to four analog sensors, with an ability to swap or replace sensors
  • Delivers high 15-bit resolution and accuracy
  • Offers versatile sensor compatibility with eight voltage input ranges up to 20.48V
Your Price $495.00
Stock Check Availability  

Overview
The HOBOnet Analog Mote enables users to quickly and easily integrate their preferred/popular 3rd party analog output sensors with the HOBOnet remote sensor network's robust data logging, telemetry, and flexibility features. Deploying this Mote gives you the versatility and adaptability to:

  • Support popular 3rd party sensors that are included with the LI-COR Cloud remote monitoring platform
  • Swap and/or reprogram your sensors to optimize your system
  • Expand your existing monitoring system without purchasing additional stations—without complicated configuration steps
  • Add sensors (like light) requiring a lower signal range, thanks to a low voltage range of 0-160 mV

Features

  • Enables integration with HOBOnet system, which streamlines deployment, provides alarm notifications, connects to LI-COR Cloud monitoring platform's robust tools, and more
  • Supports and connects up to four analog sensors, with an ability to swap or replace sensors
  • Delivers high 15-bit resolution and accuracy
  • Offers versatile sensor compatibility with eight voltage input ranges up to 20.48V
  • Allows configuration for scaled parameters
  • Provides ability to enable sampling
  • Reliable power sources from integrated solar panel for battery recharge as well as AC power
Input Channels: Four, single-ended
Measurement Range & Accuracy:
0 to 25.6mA, +/-5uA +/0.20% of reading
0 to 160mV, +/-2mV +/-0.25% of reading
0 to 320mV, +/-1mV +/-0.25% of reading
0 to 640mV, +/-0.5mV +/-0.25% of reading
0 to 1.28V, +/-0.25mV +/-0.25% of reading
0 to 2.56V, +/-0.25mV +/-0.25% of reading
0 to 5.12V, +/-0.25mV +/-0.25% of reading
0 to 10.24V, +/-0.25mV +/-0.25% of reading
0 to 20.48V, +/-0.25mV +/-0.25% of reading
Resolution: 15-bits
Field Wiring: Two or three wires via screw terminals, 16-24AWG
Minimum/Maximum Input Voltage: 0/20.48V
Minimum/Maximum Input Current: 0/25.6mA
Minimum Source Resistance for Current Measurement: 20Kohms
Excitation Voltage: 12VDC +/-5% at 200mA
  • HOBOnet Wireless Analog Mote
  • Grease packet
  • Screws and washers
  • Cable ties
  • 2 cable channels
  • Rechargeable battery pack
Questions & Answers
No Questions
Did you find what you were looking for?

Select Options

  Products 0 Item Selected
Image
Part #
Description
Price
Stock
Quantity
HOBOnet Wireless Analog Mote
RXW-ANA-900
HOBOnet wireless analog mote, 900 MHz (US)
$495.00
Check Availability  
  Accessories 0 Item Selected
Notice: At least 1 product is not available to purchase online
×
Multiple Products

have been added to your cart

There are items in your cart.

Cart Subtotal: $xxx.xx

Go to Checkout

In The News

Testing CO2 Removal Strategies in the Pacific Northwest

The ocean plays a key role in carbon dioxide (CO2) removal and storage, also known as carbon sequestration. However, with increasing emissions, a large amount of CO2 escapes into the atmosphere, worsening climate change and leading to increases in surface temperatures. In order to mitigate some of these impacts, researchers like Ally Savoie at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) are working hard to identify ways to safely improve the CO2 removal and storage capabilities in the ocean. Savoie started her career at Wright State University , where she worked in Silvia Newell’s lab examining biogeochemical cycling of nutrients in a river system. From there, she decided to pursue a master’s in marine science at the University of Southern Mississippi with Dr.

Smart Buoys Advance Climate Monitoring in Swiss Lakes

Lakes are sentinels of climate change . Globally, they are warming at an unprecedented but uneven rate, and in many places they also face direct human pressure, including from agriculture and recreation. In the Alps, scientists generally agree that climate change is of particular threat to remote lakes , where more pronounced warming threatens fragile ecosystems. Alpine Lakes in a Changing Climate Matteo Tonellotto is part of the team at the Environmental Observatory of the Italian-speaking region of Switzerland (OASI)–a multidisciplinary team of scientists, IT specialists, and chemical laboratory technicians committed to collecting, managing, and integrating high-quality environmental data.

Connecting with Nature in Real-Time at the Abernathy Field Station

Just five miles away from Washington and Jefferson (W&J) College is the 57-acre Abernathy Field Station . Generously donated by the Abernathy family in 2017, the field station has served as an outdoor lab to hundreds of undergraduate students over the years. Many classes use the Abernathy Field Station every week. For example, in BIO 111, students spend 15 weeks conducting their own research at the field station using a combination of sampling, field observations, and real-time environmental data, giving them a look into the world of science and a closer relationship with nature. “We like to start the students in the research process in their first Biology class.

Riding the Renewable Wave: Testing Wave Energy Converters at Oregon’s PacWave Site

Seven miles off Oregon’s weather-beaten coastline, the world’s biggest wave power testing facility, PacWave, is primed to put the latest renewable energy technology to the test. “There is a huge amount of energy that is not harvested in the ocean,” states the team at Oregon State University involved in the PacWave project. When it comes to harnessing the power of the waves, “It's exciting because it [wave power] is a non-polluting, non-carbon burning technology,” the team says. Wave Power The U.S. Energy Information Administration explains that tidal energy harnesses the flow of seawater in depth under the gravitational forces exerted by the sun and moon–the drivers of tides–while wave energy derives from the kinetic energy of wind-blown surface waves.