The sling psychrometer from Edmunds linked above is the Taylor I believe. I have been using one of these for several years and highly recommend it.
There has been so much discussion about this issue for years that i am surprised that any regular reader of this forum still does not consider hygrometer calibration as essential. Here is my story: a few years ago I bought 2 digital hygrometers from Stew-Mac and was impressed how they agreed to the tenth of a percent. They also indicated that the humidity was about 15 points lower than my uncalibrated analog. So, impressed with such digital accuracy, I ignored the old analog and humidified the shop enough to get the readings up to the normal range. After a couple of weeks of this, I became suspicious of the Stew-Mac instruments and bought the Taylor sling psychrometer. It turned out they were nearly 20 points off when they read in the mid-40s, but man, they sure agreed with each other nicely! From what has been said on this forum the digital hygrometers that they sell now are better, but I personally will never use a digital again.
I complained to Stew-Mac and they replied that hygrometers were only to give a relative indicator of rise and fall of humidity, No offer of my money back, even though I told them of a top that pulled itself apart after the levels were brought back to normal. I used one of them for target practice and the other for temperature alone.
Several points:
- If you do not have a calibration method in place, regard your hygrometer(s) as useless, NO MATTER HOW MANY YOU HAVE THAT AGREE WITH EACH OTHER.
- The outside RH has no useful relationship to the inside RH. Forget the weather reports! I have measured the RH outside my shop as swinging from 25 to 60 percent in 24 hours, while the inside stayed at 43 to 44 with no climate controls.
- If your hygrometer does not have a calibration screw, then toss it - you will be happier in the long run .
- Used Abbeons (like Hesh's) are frequently available on ebay for very reasonable prices. There is very little that can go wrong with these things. I have 2 that each cost less than $50 each.
- An alternative that I have been testing is the $26 Conant:
http://www.amazon.com/Conant-Custom-Bra ... 601&sr=8-5 I have found this one to stay within 2 points of accuracy in the normal shop range. It does vary more than the Abbeons as the RH gets outside of the normal range. Its big advantage is that it is easy to read and easy to calibrate.
Brook