General Boards > Technical Support
Wind Sensor Protection
Michael Kauffman:
Hi all, We have a 98' Beaver with a Girard awning and anemometer (wind sensor). I recently had to drive under some low hanging limbs on a public street and broke the wind sensor. I just ordered a new one from Girard @ $145.
I remember seeing a home made remedy that looked like a little roll cage. Do any of you remember seeing this or know of another way to protect the sensor in the future?
Thanks, Mike Kauffman, Issaquah, WA
George H. Wall:
You may cover it with a small ' hanging basket' flower holder, minus the arms, attached to the roof with a window sealer.
Joel Ashley:
Check Tom Brown's post from last May, which suggests the same solution George does: http://forum.bacrallies.com/m-1273513145/s-0/highlight-wind+sensor/#num0
Also, from another forum come these ideas:
1. If you have both pieces, try to get some CA glue used on model airplanes and add accelerator when you have it the way you need it. It will be a permanent fix. Go to a Model shop and they will fix you up for less than 20 bucks for both items.
2. Velcro the device and mount to the roof so it can come loose without breaking if hit by tree limbs.
3. Buy a Walmart $1.59 measuring spoon set, then bend the spoons with heat to 90 degrees, and rivet and superglue them into place.
I dunno about a couple of those ideas ??), but glueing the arms back on (#1) would be something I'd consider trying before antying up ridiculous bucks for an entire assembly I only need 10% of. Then I'd cage the repaired assembly as George and Tom suggest.
All these awning companies gouge customers by only offering full assemblys instead of smaller, more affordable and practical subparts; eg., Carefree window awning arms only come in pairs, which is a ludicrous waste if you only damage one arm. By the way, some prices others on other forums have paid for the sensor assembly are far more than what you and Tom have ;).
-Joel
Gil_Johnson:
Maybe that's why CareFree doesn't supply that anymore, even as a replacement part. They sell a kit that replaces the anemometer with a vibration detector that gets mounted to the end of the arm, near the motor. I did the retrofit and it wasn't too hard. Running wires in a coach is worse than running them in a boat :-(
Gil
Joel Ashley:
Yeah, I'd read some posts on the other Forum that mentioned a sensor on the end of the arm. I wondered about that, as I haven't heard of such an animal. Sounds like the way to go so limbs don't factor in anymore. Thanks for the heads up, Gil :). So the kit includes some sort of cap for where the old rooftop unit was? Were the instructions clear? What was the cost?
-Joel
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