SIGN IN | REGISTERSign in to get more opportunities
3D PrintingPopularWide range of 3D printers and filaments!
3D PrintersHot
Filaments
Resins
Spare Parts & Upgrades
Accessories & Tools
3D Scanners
Laser Engravers
3D Pen
RoboticsTOP
Arduino
Raspberry Pi
micro:bit
Sensors
Breakout Boards
Development Tools
Communication
STEM
Displays
Wearables
Electronics
Transistor-Mosfet-Triac
Integrated Circuits
Bridge Rectifiers
Buzzer - Speakers
Fuses
Prototyping Boards
Relays
Resistors
Optoelectronics
Diodes
Mechanical Parts
Servo / Motors
Linear Motion
Build Parts
Bolts / Nuts
Pneumatic Components
Couplers
Pulleys and Belts
Actobotics
Ball Bearings
Collars/Hubs
Hardware
Project Boxes
Cooling
Power Supplies
Cables
Batteries
Wires
Switches
Terminals
Connectors
IC Sockets
Tools
Soldering Equipment
Multimeters
Hand Tools
Portable Measuring Devices
Electric Tools
Laboratory Equipment
Heatshrink
Chemical
Organization and Storage
Panel Meters
STEMEducation
Level
Platform
per Brand
BrandsAll brandsFull list of all brands in the store. Browse all brands
Promotions
Brands
Newest
On sale
+302118004320 Mon-Fri 9:30-17:30
Email [email protected]
Address
Free shipping for orders over 85€ and up to 2 kg parcels.
For orders under 85€ the shipping costs start from 2.70€.
Wide range of payment methods: Cash on delivery, Debit/Credit card, Iris, PayPal
Payments | Shipping options
A meteorologically minded Raspberry Pi HAT designed to make hooking up weather sensors a breeze (or a squall, or a gale).
Weather HAT is a tidy all-in-one solution for hooking up climate and environmental sensors to a Raspberry Pi. It has a bright 1.54" LCD screen and four buttons for inputs. The onboard sensors can measure temperature, humidity, pressure and light. The sturdy RJ11 connectors (remember those?) will let you easily attach wind and rain sensors. It will work with any Raspberry Pi with a 40 pin header (that's most of them except the really old ones).
You could install it outside in a suitable weatherproof enclosure (like a Stevenson screen, a waterproof junction box or even a Tupperware container) and connect to it wirelessly - logging the data locally or piping it into Weather Underground, a MQTT broker or a cloud service like Adafruit IO. Alternatively, you could house your weather Pi inside and run wires to your weather sensors outside - making use of the nice screen to display readouts.
Software
We've put together a Python library to give you easy access to all Weather HAT's functions, together with straightforward examples to help you learn how to read the sensors and use all the individual parts. There's also a weather station example that shows you how it's possible to combine all the functions into an application.
Our Getting Started tutorial contains a thorough walkthrough of Weather HAT's functionality plus beginner friendly instructions for installing the Python library and running the examples.