Tipping Bucket Rain Gauge
Tipping Bucket Rain Gauge
The tipping bucket rain gauge measures the amount of rainfall in a set period, as well as the character of the rain. It typically consists of a large copper cylinder set into the ground, with a funnel at the top of the cylinder that collects the rain. The precipitation then fall onto one of two small levers which are balanced like a scale. When 0.2mm of rain falls, the lever tips which sends an electrical signal to the recorder. The recorder has a pen on an arm attached to a geared wheel that records movement on a graph. The modern tipping bucket rain gauge usually has a plastic collector balanced over a pivot, which activates a switch when it tips to record and transmitt the amount of precipitation fallen.
The advantage of a tipping bucket rain gauge is that it can tell the character of the rain, whether it is light, medium or heavy, by counting the number of ‘clicks’ in a 10 minute period. A ‘click’ is the sound of the recording arm moving when recording the amount on the graph.
WaterLOG Rain Gauge
The WaterLOG® H-340 is a tipping bucket rain gauge designed to be precise and durable. Constucted of extruded rustproof aluminium and a one-piece cast base, it also features a removable stainless steel funnel screen and no plastic parts. It has a magnetic reed bucket tip sensor, stainless steel or anodized aluminium internal parts, side windows allowing inspection without having to remove the cover, adjustable feet with an internal bulls-eye level, screened bottom ports, optional drain tubes, and precision bucket bearings.
Available from Semrad Pty Ltd, an Australian distributor for high performance level sensors and level controllers, it can be used to accurately measure rainfall, monitor storm water run off or other meteorological functions.

