Supported Devices
Below is a list of devices which are confirmed to run with the current version of Cumulus.
If you are running a different model, please take a moment to update the page.
We also maintain a list of unsupported devices
Supported Devices
This list applies to the latest version of Cumulus MX. Only a limited subset of these devices will work with Cumulus 1 (marked with ^).
Davis Range
- Vantage Pro ^
- Vantage Pro 2 ^
- Vantage Vue ^
- WeatherLink Live
Oregon Scientific
- WMR-928 ^
- WMR-918 ^
- WM-918 ^
- WMR-968 ^
- Equivalent rebadged Radio Shack stations (serial only) ^
- WMR-88, WMR-100, WMR-180, WMRS200 and WMR-200 ^
Fine Offset
(MyDEL, Nevada, Watson, Tycon Power, Aercus, Fine Offset etc)
Use the "Fine Offset (WH1080)" setting in Cumulus for these:
- W8681 (NOT the Watson W-8681-Pro and Pro II) ^
- WH1080 ^
- WH1080PC ^
- WH1081 ^
- WH1090 ^
- WH1091 ^
- National Geographic 265NC ^
- PCE-FWS 20 ^
- ELECSA 6975 ^
- ClimeMET CM2000 ^
- Maplin N96FY/N96GY ^
- Chas Olsen WH1080
- Ambient Weather WS-1080/WS-2080 ^
- WeatherEye WEA22 ^
- Jaycar Digitech XC0348 (AU/NZ) ^
- Tycon Power TP1080WC (USA) ^
Fine Offset with UV/Light sensor
Use this setting ("Fine Offset with Solar Sensors" in MX) for these:
- WH3080/WH3081/WH3083 ^
- WS3080/WS3081/WS3083 ^
- Other Fine Offset stations which have solar sensors (rather than just solar charging)
There are many other brands of station which are rebadged Fine Offset stations. In general, if the station is supplied with 'Easyweather' software, it is likely that the station will work with Cumulus.
Ecowitt, Misol, or Froggit
As often the case with devices manufactured by Fine Offset they are sold with a variety of brand names for essentially same device. Ecowitt (USA), Misol (China), and Froggit (Europe) are brand names for Fine Offset who are producing a new range of weather stations and sensors.
This particular device is just a transmitting relay (also known as dongle), powered by USB, containing temperature, pressure and humidity sensors, and able to interrogate a range of external sensors; and output to various external servers/destinations. These devices do not include a screen to show readings, nor do they provide any logger functionality to store readings. They support up to 8 sensors measuring temperature (MX calls these the user temperatures), plus up to 4 air quality sensors.
- Ecowitt GW1000 WiFi gateway ecowitt.com/wifi_weather
- Misol GW1K gateway SmartHub WiFi Gateway
- Froggit DP1500 WiFi gateway product_info_dp1500-wi-fi-wetterserver-usb-dongle
It is possible that model names may vary.
Cumulus MX can intercept (via your existing network router) the wifi transmissions from the device and process those. Because there is no logger, MX must be left running all the time to pick up every transmission. All of these MX can log in its extra sensor log file and output web tags so the readings can be incorporated on a web site.
La Crosse
- WS-2300 range (all model numbers of the form 23xx) ^. Use of a USB/Serial adapter is not supported with these stations.
Note that I don't have access to a La Crosse station, and the PC interface on these stations is very poor. If you find that you don't get very good results using Cumulus with one of these, I'm afraid I probably won't be able to do anything about it.
Instromet
Recent models of Instromet stations ^
Other
WeatherDuino
Unsupported Devices
Specifically, the following do not work with Cumulus. This is not a definitive list but stations we have come across which are not supported.
- La Crosse WS3650 and WS2800 (all model numbers in range WS36xx and WS28xx)
- TFA-Sinus/TFA-Nexus/Honeywell/Irox/Cresta/Ventus WXR-815LM/TE924W/TN924W/W928 etc
- AcuRite
- Peet Bros
- Rainwise
- Davis Weather Monitor
- Davis Weather Wizard
- Davis Envoy8X
- Ambient WS-1000 and WS-1001 WIFI
- Oregon Scientific WMR89 and WMR300
- Tycon Power TP2700WC
- Oregon Scientific LW301
- WS-1400-IP
- WH2600
- Watson W-8681-Pro and W-8681-Pro II
My station is unsupported - Can I use Cumulus?
If your station output can be changed into the EasyWeather_Format, then Cumulus can offer most of its functionality by reading the last line of that file each time.