Well, Randy, et.al. ... I kept telling myself I was going to observe and not respond or comment any further... but what the hell?...
,,,,So because many have complained the new Tropo reads low they've decided all the Stratus models read high 2.5% ...
This appears to me to be mis-represented and backasswards. The Stratus claims a 4" collector. If that's a fact, whatever it drips into, one inch of water must volume ±205.5ml and mass ±205.5gm at 70°F. Using 206 as unit sort of simplifies the averages. I personally have NOT decided that 'ALL Stratus models read high...' But I DO KNOW that EACH different Stratus I possess, going back 16 years or so (which I've retained for some silly reason or other), express different numbers for what should be 206gm~206ml /inch. They ALL vary from 198 to 201. The tare weight varies also. The scale graduations are NOT consistent between tubes. The overflow slot is unpredictable between tubes.
This results in physical errors that vary mathematically from 2.5 to 4 percent over-report for a device supposedly calibrated for 4" collector and 1" cylinder, and in fact when 1"indicated stratus decants into two different Tropo tubes, both Tropo tubes report less volume, and the same exact numbers are
CONFIRMED with 2 different digital scales, and with quality glass lab cylinders used as reference baseline for calculated mass/volume. And furthermore, on many of my Stratus cylinders, the error by mass/volume approached 10% on lower 'depths' computing gm or ml! Many of us noted the Stratus inconsistency, beginning with the overflow slot variance perhaps, and started commenting about it, and folks stated checking, etc.
...and they've known it all along which I find ridiculous.
Well, I do agree that a claim of 'known it all along' is a bit of a stretch. I'm not sure I've run into anyone who has stated that, however, and I certainly didn't. Apparently for the first 40 years, things were apparently well with Stratus production consistency, and accuracy. I suppose someone who began using a Stratus 5-10 years ago may have 'known it all along'. I personally started noting question points with the Stratus I obtained about 6 years ago, and the quality control, including the transparency of the Stratus material has varied all over the place with parts I've received since then.
I don't think the 2-8" diameter gauges are wrong.
Ok. I agree, the NWS 8" SRG is the gold standard.
Then this must follow:
If I've done the math correctly, one inch in the 8" gauge should be ±824gm ~ ml, or, (Why, imagine this!) 4 times 206gms and 206ml!!!. I don't own a NWS 8" gauge, so I can't physically check that, but I took the TROPO inner cylinder, filled it to one inch 4 times. Repeated a few times, because I was a little bit surprised... Can you guess the results? Yep. Surprise! By magic, the actual measurements were ± 823-825gm and ± 823-825ml. Per scale, per lab cylinder. ...sigh.
This is just a Red Herring to distract from the bottom line, the new Tropo model measures 4% low vs the 8" SRG. This comparison above was a substantial rainfall so a good sample size plus a low wind event and no reason the results aren't true.
Ahem. I'll state it firmly...
No! The Tropo
doesn't measure 4% low vs 8" NWS SRG... IF the EXACT same number of identical drops fall into the two collectors, and if both are constructed per specs, and not damaged, dirty, whatever!!! In the case of the TROPO the inner cylinder graduations are calculated to be precise per gm~ml equivalent, laser cut AFTER molding. BOTH gauges should, in fact, agree. I just illustrated that mathematically, and with calculated volume and mass physical measurements that the Tropo and the 8" NWS SRG are designed equivalent, and physically shown that the TROPO corresponds with the calculated amounts...
You are, of course, aware that a 'Red Herring' is simply an over-smoked and salted regular herring, right? I personally don't fancy an English breakfast with kippers, whatever color, however.
The actual facts behind the development of one alternative to the Stratus, what became the Tropo, can be traced back to "WeatherFlow" research from about 2016, and released to 'private' sector in 2021. https://uploads-ssl.webflow.com/6273f802e4834effc055005d/6468d7ca36a65a717dcaf06a_TROPO%20history%20-%20Climalytic%20Presentation%20(WERA%2C%2017May2023).pdf