Although the new barometer readings did not seem to change much, I wanted to *KNOW* they were OK.
Looks good. You won't see a lot of change until the altimeter gets quite high or low. That's where the Vue keeps up and the VP2 begins losing ground. Sit the two together and observe as I did, you'll begin to see the subtleties.
To be honest, I replaced the VP2 console with the Vue console because of reception/drop-out problems with the VP2, not because of pressure readings.
Between 07/22/15 and 10/30/16, the VP2 console experienced 21 episodes of
total ISS signal drop-outs. In earlier years, I'd see one, maybe two, drop-outs a year, but starting in 2015, they began to occur increasingly more often. And, all (I believe) were RX problems, not really ISS TX problems -- I know this because data saved by my concurrently operating Envoy8X, which simultaneously receives its data from the same VP2 ISS, did not contain any drop-outs.
Davis makes GOOD equipment, but it certainly is
NOT perfect equipment...I wouldn't trust them to make
my pacemaker (wink,wink)!