YOUNG Rain Gauge Calibrator

The YOUNG 52260 Rain Gauge Calibrator offers a convenient way to determine rain gauge accuracy.

Features

  • The RM Young 52260 Works with 1000, 1500 & 2000 mL/hr nominal flow rates
  • Calibrator includes a water bottle with constant head adapter
  • Designed for use with RM Young 52203 & 52202 tipping bucket rain gauges
Your Price $218.00
Stock Drop Ships From Manufacturer  

Overview
The RM Young 52260 Rain Gauge Calibrator offers a convenient way to determine rain gauge accuracy. The calibrator includes a water bottle with a constant head adapter and flow nozzles for various flow rates.

  • Dimensions: 29cm (11.4") H x 13cm (5.1") Dia.
  • Weight: 0.2kg (0.5 lb)
  • Shipping Weight: 0.8kg (1.8 lb)
  • (1) Graduated bottle, 1000mL
  • (1) Bottle stand, fits in rain gauge collector
  • (1) Constant head adapter
  • (3) Nozzles for 1000, 1500 & 2000 mL/hr nominal flow rates
Questions & Answers
No Questions
Did you find what you were looking for?

Select Options

  Products 0 Item Selected
Image
Part #
Description
Price
Stock
Quantity
YOUNG Rain Gauge Calibrator
52260
Rain gauge calibrator
Your Price $218.00
Drop Ships From Manufacturer  
  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

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.

Read More

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.

Read More

Monitoring OAE Efforts in Halifax: Fighting Climate Change with Emerging mCDR Strategies

Marine carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) removal (mCDR) is an emerging strategy that aims to fight climate change by taking advantage of the carbon capture potential of our oceans. There are multiple types of mCDR approaches being evaluated globally, one of which is ocean alkalinity enhancement (OAE). According to NOAA , OAE aims to increase the pH of water by either adding alkaline material to ocean surface waters or by removing acid from seawater. Due to the change in acidity, the chemistry of seawater changes, making it capable of absorbing greater volumes of CO 2 .

Read More