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How To Make a Barometer.

A Barometer is used to measure the atmospheric pressure and is a tool to forecast the weather. (5/06/2007)


Source: http://www.josepino.com/?howto_barometer   Tags: howto science projects diy homemade

What is a "Barometer" ?

Answer: An instrument used to measure atmospheric pressure. There are two main types: aneroid and mercury. The aneroid barometer makes use of a small sealed chamber connected to a pointer mechanism. Mercury barometers use a glass tube filled with mercury and inverted over a mercury-filled chamber. Normally, the atmosphere at sea level can support the column of mercury to 29.92 inches. An aneroid barometer is calibrated so that its pointer reads the pressure as inches of mercury, too.
source: wilstar.com/skywatch_glossary.htm
Taken from http://www.josepino.com
I don't have lots or mercury (only on my teeth fillings as my dentist said, but is not enough to make one), so I decided to build this "Aneroid Barometer"

Here is what I need:

1 Empty tuna can, cup or anything wide that can hold water.
1 12" Baloon (Doesn't matter if helium grade)
1 Rubber band
1 Any of this available: Chopstick, bambu stick or straw. Anything longer than 8" work fine.
1 Piece of cardboard, marker or pen.
  Glue (or tape) and Scissors.
  Water

**WARNING*** - Rubber balloons, ruber bands and scissors are dangerous! I'm not kidding, you can hurt yourself if those items are not used properly. Read the disclaimer at the main page.

cut the balloon. Cut the balloon as the photo show.

put the balloon on the cup Put the balloon on the cup, fix the ruber band so the balloon doesn't slip off.

glue the chopstick Glue the bamboo stick (or straw) at the center of the baloon. If the stick is heavy and the can or cup flips over, put some water on it.

make the cardboard meter Use the card board and tape to make it to stand vertically.

measure the pressure. After the glue is dry, use the cardboard to put some marks and measure the pressure. If the weather is cloudy or raining, put the middle mark above the stick. If the weather is sunny, put the middle mark below it.

cloudy day Your barometer should be ready. When I built it, I had rain, so the stick was pointing just below the middle line.

weather going better After 20 minutes, the "needle" moved.

Low pressure is associated with less stable weather patterns, while high pressure is associated with more stable weather patterns. To forecast weather with your barometer, it is important to watch the speed and direction of barometric change.

On this case, the needle was going up, that means, the weather will improve.

Basically, here is how to read the barometer:

High Pressure:
Rising or steady - Continued fair
Slowing falling - Fair
Rapidly falling - Cloudy, Warmer

Medium pressure:
Rising or steady - Same as present
Slowing falling - Little change
Rapidly falling - Precipitation likely

Low Pressure:
Rising or steady - Clearing, cooler
Slowing falling - Precipitation
Rapid falling - Storm

How it works?

The air inside the cup have a different presure than the outside air, so it makes the balloon to bend outside or inside. If the atmospheric pressure is low, the pressure inside the cup will be higher and it pushes the balloon outside and the stick will point to a lower level.

When the atmospheric pressure is high, the pressure inside will be lower and the stick will point higher.

This is not a "professional" barometer but works fine, excellent for a science project or just for fun.

5/6/07 Update: At night, the pressure was high. That indicates we will have better weather the next morning. The weather channel forecast shows a sunny morning. My barometer works like a charm.

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Share your comments and experience:
Keep it short, Comments with bad words, spam and non-related will be deleted.

09/03/09 - 12:59:54 Stephanie from Franklin, VA 23851 wrote: This looks really awesome dude check it out.....and have you actually made one yourself or did you just copy and paste someone eles work?
09/03/09 - 13:03:34 Youdontknowme from Maryland wrote: dude this is frieken awesome...and have you actually made one yourself or did you just copy and paste someone elses work?
09/03/09 - 17:03:19 José Pino wrote: 1st: I don't copy and paste "someone else work". If you find this article somewhere else, that means it was stolen from my website (as many other articles that were stolen from my site).
2nd: Yes, I made it as you can see in the pictures. Anyone having an idea how pressure atmospheric pressure work, can devise how to make one.
3rd: No need to change your location or Nickname just to correct an error on your message.

10/30/09 - 00:06:19 Silver from wrote: How does it work?
10/30/09 - 00:12:20 José Pino wrote: The difference of pressure inside the cup and the atmospheric pressure makes the balloon to bend, moving the "needle" and indicating the pressure. If the inside pressure is greater than the outside one, the balloon will bend making a "bump".  
11/02/09 - 23:47:41 Sasa from Serbia wrote: Jose Pino, you are great! I'm enjoying reading your site!
11/09/09 - 05:48:37 sasalollypop from mystery land wrote: your site is great! it has given me all the information i need for my science project!im gonna go and build one for myself now!

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