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- #161
Oh, I get it! I thought you were asking me what the temps are holding in the cave! Duh, Diane!
I used a wireless thermometer in the coop after I put last year's chicks in there. Drove myself crazy the first couple of nights watching it tick down to the low 20s and even 10 degrees one night. They work really well as long as you aren't looking for absolute precision. I have no problem with a factor of + or - 4 or 5 degrees. Maybe I'm just too casual about stuff, I dunno. Putting one in the run to see if you need to make adjustments is a great idea. Beats running out there every few hours and sticking your head in to see. We also have one with the transmitter outside on the deck and the receiver in the living room. That one has been pretty spot on with the big outdoor thermometer (not a mercury one, but the kind with the big stupid tractor on it with the hand to tell the temp), although I'm sure there's mercury or something inside of it that tells the hand where to go.
As for the air pressure, I wasn't specifically inferring that that would cause the mercury to read cooler - in fact you bring up a really interesting point. If the air pressure is increased, then wouldn't that push the mercury up, making the readings artificially higher rather than lower? I don't know, I'm just trying out hpyhod....hypeothesses......hipothase.........guesses.

As for the air pressure, I wasn't specifically inferring that that would cause the mercury to read cooler - in fact you bring up a really interesting point. If the air pressure is increased, then wouldn't that push the mercury up, making the readings artificially higher rather than lower? I don't know, I'm just trying out hpyhod....hypeothesses......hipothase.........guesses.