YOUNG Serial Interface
Features
- Data can be carried over great distances using a minimum number of conductors
- Digital signal is more resistant to electrical interference and errors from line losses
- Each model is supplied in a weather-resistant enclosure
- Free ground shipping
- Expedited repair and warranty service
- Lifetime technical support
- More
Overview
The YOUNG 32400 Serial Interface greatly simplifies connection of meteorological sensors to recording electronics with serial inputs. The serial interface greatly simplifies the connection of meteorological sensors to recording electronics with serial inputs. By transmitting the signal in serial form, sensor data can be carried over great distances using a minimum number of conductors. The digital signal is more resistant to electrical interference and errors from line losses. The YOUNG 32400 is supplied in a weather-resistant enclosure and has a convenient clamp for attachment to a round pipe.
- Size: 4.75" (12cm) H x 2.87" (7.3cm) W x 2.12" (5.3cm) D
- Resolution: 1 degree azimuth
- Accuracy: +/-2 degrees RMS
- Inputs: YOUNG wind sensors 2 channels, 0-1000 mV 2 channels, 0-5000 mV
- Outputs: Serial RS232/RS485
- Selectable formats: ASCII Text, NMEA, RMYT compatible with 06201 display
- Operating Temperature: -50 C to +50 C
- Power: 10 to 30 VDC, 30 mA
- Mounting: 1" IPS (1.34" actual diameter)
In The News
UNC's industry-standard water quality profiling platforms get upgrade
The University of North Carolina Institute Of Marine Sciences has a history with profiling platforms. UNC engineers and scientists have been building the research floaters for 10 years in a lab run by in Rick Luettich, director of the institute. UNC scientists and engineers developed their own autonomous vertical profilers to take water quality readings throughout the water column. They have three profilers placed in the New and Neuse rivers. The profilers are designed to drop a payload of sensors to an allotted depth at set time intervals. Instruments attached take readings continuously on the way down and up. Data collected by the profilers has been used to study water related issues such as infectious disease and sediment suspension.
USGS weather station network monitors Arctic Alaska's climate
When the U.S. Geological Survey began building their climate and permafrost monitoring network in Arctic Alaska in 1998, there wasn't much precedent for how to build the infrastructure for the instruments in the region's unforgiving environment. That meant the scientists had to learn the particulars on the fly. For example: On the great expanse of flat, barren tundra, a weather station sticks out like a sore thumb to a curious grizzly bear. "The initial stations were pretty fragile," said Frank Urban, a geologist with the USGS Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center. "So the bear and those stations--the bear won every single time without any problem.
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.


