I just use CoCoRaHS
http://cocorahs.org/Content.aspx?page=et
This'll be third year. Beautiful.
http://cocorahs.org/ViewData/ListETReports.aspx
Mike
I gather you're using the type you need to read and refill manually, rather than a more automated one? At a 12 inch water depth, it looks like the manual version could last 3-4 weeks between refills during the hottest months here, and presumably longer than that during other months. Can it be operated that way?
Yes, the ETogage uses distilled water... and operates with a ceramic cup, and 2 covers that simulate crops. CoCoRaHS uses a 'lawn' reference, but other reference covers ( alfalfa, e.g.) are available. I don't know where you're located, but here in central KY the highest ET for one day so far has been about 0.37" or so. Right now, it's running about .05 to .08 daily. As the season warms, and depending on clouds, other conditions, she'll settle into a 0.15-0.30" pattern. A second station in southwestern KY records similar, as do a couple in southern Indiana... I usually fill the gauge somewhere around the 9-10" mark, but they can be refilled anytime, you just transmit your 'refill' level to the server... bout a simple as it gets.
I may refill mine about 2- 3 times yearly depending on when winter returns. The ceramic may break if it freezes, so it's not used during winter weather. I'll bring it inside if the temp is forecast below freezing, setting it back out as appropriate.
There is an electronic model available... CoCoRaHS observers get the devices for slightly more than 50% of retail. Even so, the ceramic cup, and its 2 coverings are very expensive innovations with years of R&D, so the devices are not 'cheap'. They have been used for over a decade by farmers in the Midwest and high plains, I understand.
I figure mine paid for itself the first season in water bills trying to keep my lawn's very thin topsoil moist on this hillside. I had watered many times previously that hadn't been necessary, I discovered.