I recently got my new Tempest weather station and installed it outside where there will be sunshine. But in the first two and a half weeks I have had it, we have had no sun. Now my Tempest is shutting down to conserve power.
There are âmanyâ threads and comments about how to use lights to do this (albeit a bit slowly). Search for power booster as one suggestion to find them.
Iâve been using mine up in Seattle for around a year and a half, and itâs been reliably charging even in our meager winter light. It does have pretty good southern exposure, though.
Iâm fortunate in that our Tempest placement seems to not be as problematic as it appears to be for others, but I read all of the related posts just in case the trees conspire against me one day.
I think we also need to consider wave length as the solar panels donât react the same way according what light it gets. Found some details in this article.
The article you linked to says, âSolar radiation with wavelengths of 380 nm to 750 nm (violet to red) strike the material with enough energy to knock electrons from their weak bonds and create an electric current.â
Guide to LEP Flashlights says, âThis Phosphor-Converted LED utilized the blue light to excite phosphor powder, resulting in combined yellow and blue wavelengths to produce a broad spectrum white light.â
If yellow is ~580 nm and blue ~450 nm, seems like those are in the range? (Iâm not a physicist, so there may be lots of subtleties Iâm missing!)