Kestrel in a car

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

Written by Kestrel intern Joe Moore, senior meteorology student at Millersville University.

This summer has proven to be one of the hottest on record, and we’re only now in mid-July! Even when the weather is mild, temperatures in cars can soar to dangerous levels within minutes.

We decided to do an experiment with the Kestrel 4500 Bluetooth unit to see just how hot the inside of a car could get during one of the hottest day of the summer. Check out the latest episode of KestrelTV where Kestrel Weather girl Monica Devlin shows you how your car becomes an oven under the hot sun.

It should be noted that we did place the Kestrel in direct sunlight. In meteorology, temperature sensors are always placed in the shade with good airflow. We did this because we were measuring the temperature on the dashboard. Temperature measurements in other parts of the vehicle were likely less than measured on the dashboard, but still significant. The dashboard surface is said to be similar to the hard parts of a child’s car seat in terms of how it much it can heat up.

Graph of Kestrel in a car data

Graph of Temp (F) and Relative Humidity (%) of our Kestrel in a Car experiment. The data before the temperature begins to rise is from using the Kestrel on a tripod and vane mount to monitor conditions during the early afternoon.

Notice how there is hardly any humidity in the vehicle. Since the low humidity would encourage efficient sweating, any person or animal placed in the car would be dehydrated very fast. Also notice not just how hot it gets but how fast the temperate rises just within the first ten minutes.

Jan Null, Adjunct Professor of Meteorology at SFSU has done extensive research on this topic and provides an up-to-date page on the current statistics and research. His experiments covered a large range of temperatures and he says that “‘cracking the windows had little effect.”

You can download the data from our experiment below. The file is split into four sheets: an introduction, the raw data, the raw data with explanations and finally, a graph. You can investigate the data yourself and make graphs of different things. (Note, we took out data like wind speed that didn’t make any sense to include.) Download the data here (.xls file)

You can find more details for Jan Null’s website here: http://ggweather.com/heat/

Have questions or comments? Share them below, on Facebook or tweet at us!

Un Fuego! Kestrel Weather at Interschutz Firefighting Tradeshow

Monday, July 5th, 2010

NK Sales & Marketing Manager, Katie Godfrey, and Kestrel Business Development Manager, Christy Munding, took on Germany for the Interschutz Tradeshow. Interschutz is the international exhibition for Rescue, Fire Prevention, Disable Relief, Safety & Security. For short, us industry folks call it Interschutz.

Kestrel Pocket Weather Meters are used by wildland firefighters all over the globe. Knowing relative humidity, wet bulb temperature and various other conditions is critical when battling wind-whipped blazes. Imagine being responsible for containing one of the most unpredictable, volatile forces of nature — fire. Talk about pressure. Particularly, in dense brush areas where the environment and ambient conditions fuse to create a potentially deadly crucible that knows no boundaries.

Firefighters are able to use their Kestrel Pocket Weather Meter to quickly get accurate weather conditions right where they are. Monitoring the on-site blaze conditions gives firefighters the information they need about fire behavior and making decisions for safety and strategy.

We understand what a dangerous job firefighters have and are proud to make products that are as tough as the demanding environments they face. When you’re facing a field with quickly-spreading orange stripes of destruction, you don’t have time to guess. You need reliability, accuracy and something that can take the heat.

Before the Kestrel Meter became the standard tool for firefighters more than a decade ago, they used an apparatus called a sling psychrometer, which is basically two thermometers mounted together with a handle attached to a chain. One thermometer has a wet cloth over it for determining wet bulb temperature. They’d twirl the sling psychrometer around and this would tell them the measurement based on temperature and evaporation rate of the wet cloth. A lot more work than just turning on your Kestrel Meter!

Here’s a pic of a Kestrel 3000 one of our wildland firefighters sent me after it survived a 500 degree blaze. Definitely one for the trophy case. It still turns on and the impeller still works. Though, the screen is a bit smoked out. Kestrel S’More anyone? Kestrel meters are regarded as the toughest hand-held weather meters available for a reason. So we feel confident offering an atypical five-year warranty on all our meters.

If you’d like to learn more about wildland firefighting, check out this cool (or hot) resource center the National Geographic site has posted.


Sales Manager Katie doesn’t just sell Kestrel Meters to firefighters, she’s so dedicated she even went and got certified as a Wildland firefighter herself!

That’s pretty smoking hot, huh?

See Katie and Christy talk Kestrels and fire in an interview from the tradeshow.

Kestrel Girls at Interschutz