Weems and Plath Endurance II 135 Barometer/Thermometer User Manual

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VI. Barometer Instructions

When your barometer left the factory, it was set at standard sea level.
To calibrate your barometer to the atmospheric pressure in your area:

1) Find the current atmospheric pressure by checking local televison station

or weather website such as NOAA.
2) On back side of instrument, use standard screwdriver and turn the slot

head screw to correct position. Never turn this screw in either direction more

than one full rotation as it could cause movement damage. (For Endurance

135 series, turn the fastener on the porthole door of the instrument counter-

clockwise to release the hinged bezel and open. Then adjust screw on

back of movement as above.) For every 100 feet in altitude, an adjustment

of 0.11 inch is required (1,000 ft. = 1.1 inches). The movement used in this

barometer is adjustable up to an altitude of 3,500 feet.
3) The movable pointer (memory hand) at the center of the glass crystal

should be set to the present atmospheric pressure by superimposing it upon

the barometer needle. This will allow you to return to the barometer after

some time has passed and determine if the atmospheric pressure has risen or fallen.

PLEASE NOTE: A barometer is an instrument used to predict a change in

weather by measuring variations in atmospheric pressure, or the weight of the

air around us. The barometer will normally predict changes in weather 12

to 24 hours in advance. It is not an indicator of present weather conditions.

Your barometer is an aneroid or holosteric type which measures atmospheric

pressures mechanically without use of liquids.

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