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(Die Seite wurde neu angelegt: = The *.WET Format for Climate Data = <P> You can use existing IBP weather files (file format *.WET) to perform WUFI calculations; you can also convert your own weathe...)
 
 
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<UL>
* <B>Day, month, year, hour</B> (<TT>integer</TT>):<BR> &nbsp;<BR> The IBP files contain hourly mean values of the measured data. These time stamps indicate the point in time when each measuring interval of one hour was finished and the measured mean values recorded. I.e., the data line starting with 01 01 91 04 contains the mean values for the hour from 03:00 to 04:00 on January 1, 1991.<BR> &nbsp;<BR> Since its data are real-life data, an IBP weather file may contain an intercalary day (February 29). WUFI however knows nothing about intercalary days (at least in the present version). These must be deleted from files you want to use for WUFI calculations.<BR> &nbsp;<BR> The time count always refers to winter time (CET). There is no daylight saving time.&nbsp;<BR>
<LI><B>Day, month, year, hour</B> (<TT>integer</TT>):<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    <DL><DD>The IBP files contain hourly mean values of the measured data.
    These time stamps indicate the point in time when each measuring interval
    of one hour was finished and the measured mean values recorded. I.e.,
    the data line starting with 01 01 91 04 contains the mean values for
    the hour from 03:00 to 04:00 on January 1, 1991.<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    Since its data are real-life data, an IBP weather file may contain an
    intercalary day (February 29). WUFI however knows nothing about intercalary
    days (at least in the present version). These must be deleted from files
    you want to use for WUFI calculations.<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    The time count always refers to winter time (CET). There is no daylight
    saving time.
    </DL>
    &nbsp;<BR>
</LI>


<LI><B>Exterior air temperature</B> (<TT>real</TT>):<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    <DL><DD>the temperature of the exterior ambient air in [&deg;C]. It is
    used without change as the exterior air temperature in the WUFI calculation.
    </DL>
    &nbsp;<BR>
</LI>


<LI>Temperature of black surface (<TT>real</TT>):</LI>
* <B>Exterior air temperature</B> (<TT>real</TT>):<BR> &nbsp;<BR> the temperature of the exterior ambient air in [&deg;C]. It is used without change as the exterior air temperature in the WUFI calculation. &nbsp;<BR>
<LI>Temperature of white surface (<TT>real</TT>):<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    <DL><DD>Surface temperatures of west-facing test facade elements painted
    black
    ([[ShortWaveRadiationAbsorptivity.htm | >a<small>s</small>]] &#126;
    0.9) and white (a<small>s</small> &#126; 0.4), respectively.<BR>
    These may optionally be read
    [[DialogClimateFileDetails.htm | instead of the exterior air
    temperature]].
    </DL>
    &nbsp;<BR>
</LI>


<LI>Temperature of Ground Surface (<TT>real</TT>):</LI>
<LI>Temperature 50 cm below Ground Surface (<TT>real</TT>):</LI>
<LI>Temperature 1 m below Ground Surface (<TT>real</TT>):<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    <DL><DD>Soil temperatures at various depths in [&deg;C].<BR>
    These may optionally be read
    [[DialogClimateFileDetails.htm | instead of the exterior air
    temperature]].
    </DL>
    &nbsp;<BR>
</LI>


<LI><B>Global radiation</B> (<TT>real</TT>):<BR>
* Temperature of black surface (<TT>real</TT>):
    &nbsp;<BR>
* Temperature of white surface (<TT>real</TT>):<BR> &nbsp;<BR> Surface temperatures of west-facing test facade elements painted black ([[Details:ShortWave |a<small>s</small>]] &#126; 0.9) and white (a<small>s</small> &#126; 0.4), respectively.<BR> These may [[2D:Dialog_ClimateFileDetails |optionally]] be read  instead of the exterior air temperature.&nbsp;<BR>
    <DL><DD>the sum of the direct and diffuse components of the solar
    radiation incident on a horizontal surface; in [W/m&sup2;].
    </DL>
    &nbsp;<BR>
</LI>


<LI><B>Diffuse radiation</B> (<TT>real</TT>):<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    <DL><DD>the diffuse component of the solar radiation incident on a
    horizontal surface; in [W/m&sup2;].<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    Subtracting the diffuse radiation from the global radiation results in
    the direct radiation. From this, the direct normal radiation can be
    calculated, i.e., the amount of radiation incident on a surface that is
    orthogonal to the ray direction. This calculation requires knowledge of
    the time and geographical location of the measurement, since the
    corresponding position of the sun has to be determined [2].<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    The direct normal radiation can then be used to calculate the direct
    radiation incident on a surface with arbitrary orientation and inclination.
    Addition of the appropriate fraction of diffuse radiation results in the
    global radiation incident on the building component.<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    These calculations are automatically done by WUFI during a simulation run.<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    WUFI uses a
    [[QandA.htm | simplified radiation model]] which treats the diffuse
    radiation as isotropic and ignores the albedo of the ground. If you are more
    demanding or want to allow for local specifics (like shadows etc.), you can
    perform the conversion yourself and feed the results to WUFI via a
    [[TheKLIFormatForClimateData.htm | *.KLI file]].
    </DL>
    &nbsp;<BR>
</LI>


<LI>Western radiation (<TT>real</TT>):<BR>
* Temperature of Ground Surface (<TT>real</TT>):
    &nbsp;<BR>
* Temperature 50 cm below Ground Surface (<TT>real</TT>):
    <DL><DD>the global radiation measured with a west-facing solarimeter; in
* Temperature 1 m below Ground Surface (<TT>real</TT>):<BR> &nbsp;<BR> Soil temperatures at various depths in [&deg;C].<BR> These may [[2D:Dialog_ClimateFileDetails |optionally]] be read instead of the exterior air temperature.&nbsp;<BR>
    [W/m&sup2;].<BR>
    Optionally, the radiation component impinging on a (west-facing) facade may
    [[DialogClimateFileDetails.htm | directly be read from this column]].
    No conversion is then necessary as would be the case if global and diffuse
    radiation were used as data source.
    </DL>
    &nbsp;<BR>
</LI>


<LI><B>Relative humidity</B> (<TT>real</TT>):<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    <DL><DD>the relative humidity of the ambient air (0..1). Used by WUFI
    without change as the exterior relative humidity.
    </DL>
    &nbsp;<BR>
</LI>


<LI><B>Barometric pressure</B> (<TT>real</TT>):<BR>
* <B>Global radiation</B> (<TT>real</TT>):<BR> &nbsp;<BR> the sum of the direct and diffuse components of the solar radiation incident on a horizontal surface; in [W/m&sup2;].&nbsp;<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    <DL><DD>the ambient air pressure reduced to sea level; in [hPA].
    </DL>
    &nbsp;<BR>
</LI>


<LI><B>Wind velocity</B> (<TT>real</TT>):<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    <DL><DD>the scalar mean of the wind velocity; in [m/s]. It is needed to
    compute the driving rain from the normal rain.<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    The scalar mean of the wind velocity is the mean value of the readings of
    an anemometer without the directions taken into account. For example, if for
    an hour the wind is blowing at 2 m/s but at the same time steadily travelling
    through all the direcions, then the scalar mean is 2 m/s, whereas the vectorial
    mean is 0 m/s.<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    In the vectorial mean, some vector components may cancel. Thus, the scalar
    mean is greater than (or at least equal to) the vectorial mean.<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    The IBP weather files also contain information about the distribution of
    the wind directions (see below). This allows to ignore components that come
    from 'behind' (and don't contribute to the rain load) and to weight the
    remaining directions according to the angle they make with the surface.
    </DL>
    &nbsp;<BR>
</LI>


<LI>Normal rain / tipping bucket (<TT>real</TT>):</LI>
* <B>Diffuse radiation</B> (<TT>real</TT>):<BR> &nbsp;<BR> the diffuse component of the solar radiation incident on a horizontal surface; in [W/m&sup2;].<BR> &nbsp;<BR> Subtracting the diffuse radiation from the global radiation results in the direct radiation. From this, the direct normal radiation can be calculated, i.e., the amount of radiation incident on a surface that is orthogonal to the ray direction. This calculation requires knowledge of the time and geographical location of the measurement, since the corresponding position of the sun has to be determined [2].<BR> &nbsp;<BR> The direct normal radiation can then be used to calculate the direct radiation incident on a surface with arbitrary orientation and inclination. Addition of the appropriate fraction of diffuse radiation results in the global radiation incident on the building component.<BR> &nbsp;<BR> These calculations are automatically done by WUFI during a simulation run.<BR> &nbsp;<BR> WUFI uses a [[FAQ:General | simplified radiation model]] which treats the diffuse radiation as isotropic and ignores the albedo of the ground. If you are more demanding or want to allow for local specifics (like shadows etc.), you can perform the conversion yourself and feed the results to WUFI via a [[Details:KLI-File | *.KLI file]]. &nbsp;<BR>
<LI><B>Normal rain / droplet counter</B> (<TT>real</TT>):<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    <DL><DD>the normal rain (i.e., the rain incident on a horizontal surface in
    open area) during one hour, measured with a tipping bucket and a droplet counter
    rain gauge, respectively; in [Ltr/m&sup2;h] or, equivalently, [mm/h].<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    WUFI uses the readings of the droplet counter, since it is in general more
    reliable.<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    The rain load on a wall is determined by the driving rain rather than the
    normal rain. The driving rain can be estimated from the normal rain and the
    wind velocity:<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    The rain coefficients R1 and R2 in the
    [[DialogEditSurfaceCoefficients.htm | dialog "Edit Surface
    Coefficients.htm"]] serve to estimate the driving rain load on a surface
    of arbitrary orientation and inclination from data on normal rain, wind
    velocity and wind direction distributions, using the relation<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    <CENTER>rain load = rain · (R1 + R2 · wind velocity),</CENTER>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    where "rain" is the normal rain and "wind velocity" is that component of the
    mean wind velocity (measured at a height of 10 m, in open area), which is
    orthogonal to the building surface. This component is determined from the
    scalar mean of the wind velocity (see above) and the wind direction
    distribution (see below).<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    R1 and R2 are strongly dependent on the specific location on the building
    facade. If calculations are to be compared to actual measurements, these
    coefficients should be experimentally determined for that location.<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    If they cannot be measured, only a very rough estimate is possible. For
    vertical surfaces, R1 is zero. R2 is about 0.2 s/m for free-standing
    locations without influence from surrounding buildings etc.; it is markedly
    less in the center of a facade (e.g. 0.07 s/m); it may even be greater at
    exposed locations of a building (near edges and corners)[1].
    </DL>
    &nbsp;<BR>
</LI>


<LI>Driving rain / tipping bucket (<TT>real</TT>):</LI>
<LI>Driving rain / droplet counter (<TT>real</TT>):<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    <DL><DD>the driving rain load on a west-facing wall, measured at a height
    of 1.50 m with a tipping bucket and a droplet counter rain gauge, respectively.
    In [Ltr/m&sup2;h] or, equivalently, [mm/h].<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    WUFI uses the readings of the droplet counter, since it is in general
    more reliable.<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
    The values in this column can
    [[DialogClimateFileDetails.htm | optionally be read]] and used for
    the variable
    'rain' in the formula for the rain load (see above: normal rain). Set R1 to
    1 and R2 to zero; the resulting rain load will then directly be the measured
    driving rain.
    </DL>
    &nbsp;<BR>
</LI>


<LI><B>Wind direction distribution</B> (17 * <TT>integer</TT>):<BR>
* <B>Western radiation</B> (<TT>real</TT>):<BR> &nbsp;<BR> the global radiation measured with a west-facing solarimeter; in [W/m&sup2;].<BR> [[2D:Dialog_ClimateFileDetails |Optionally]], the radiation component impinging on a (west-facing) facade may  directly be read from this column. No conversion is then necessary as would be the case if global and diffuse radiation were used as data source. &nbsp;<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
 
    <DL><DD>the frequency of wind directions, binned into sectors of 22.5&deg;
 
    each.<BR>
* <B>Relative humidity</B> (<TT>real</TT>):<BR> &nbsp;<BR> the relative humidity of the ambient air (0..1). Used by WUFI without change as the exterior relative humidity.&nbsp;<BR>
    &nbsp;<BR>
 
    The wind direction is averaged over 2 minutes and the counter of the
 
    corresponding sector then increased by one. A special counter is registering
* <B>Barometric pressure</B> (<TT>real</TT>):<BR> &nbsp;<BR> the ambient air pressure reduced to sea level; in [hPA]. &nbsp;<BR>
    calms. The sum of all counts during one hour should thus be 30 if no
 
    interruption of the measurements has occured.<BR>
 
    &nbsp;<BR>
* <B>Wind velocity</B> (<TT>real</TT>):<BR> &nbsp;<BR> the scalar mean of the wind velocity; in [m/s]. It is needed to compute the driving rain from the normal rain.<BR> &nbsp;<BR> The scalar mean of the wind velocity is the mean value of the readings of an anemometer without the directions taken into account. For example, if for an hour the wind is blowing at 2 m/s but at the same time steadily travelling through all the direcions, then the scalar mean is 2 m/s, whereas the vectorial mean is 0 m/s.<BR> &nbsp;<BR> In the vectorial mean, some vector components may cancel. Thus, the scalar mean is greater than (or at least equal to) the vectorial mean.<BR> &nbsp;<BR> The IBP weather files also contain information about the distribution of the wind directions (see below). This allows to ignore components that come from 'behind' (and don't contribute to the rain load) and to weight the remaining directions according to the angle they make with the surface. &nbsp;<BR>
    The individual counters are assigned to the following directions:<BR>
 
    &nbsp;<BR>
 
    <CENTER>NNE-NE-ENE-E-ESE-SE-SSE-S-SSW-SW-WSW-W-WNW-NW-NNW-N-calm</CENTER>
* <B>Normal rain / tipping bucket</B> (<TT>real</TT>):
    &nbsp;<BR>
* <B>Normal rain / droplet counter</B> (<TT>real</TT>):<BR> &nbsp;<BR> the normal rain (i.e., the rain incident on a horizontal surface in open area) during one hour, measured with a tipping bucket and a droplet counter rain gauge, respectively; in [Ltr/m&sup2;h] or, equivalently, [mm/h].<BR> &nbsp;<BR> WUFI uses the readings of the droplet counter, since it is in general more reliable.<BR> &nbsp;<BR> The rain load on a wall is determined by the driving rain rather than the normal rain. The driving rain can be estimated from the normal rain and the wind velocity:<BR> &nbsp;<BR> The rain coefficients R1 and R2 in the dialog [[1D:Dialog_Orientation | orientation, inclination and height]] serve to estimate the driving rain load on a surface of arbitrary orientation and inclination from data on normal rain, wind velocity and wind direction distributions, using the relation<BR> &nbsp;<BR> <CENTER>rain load = rain · (R1 + R2 · wind velocity),</CENTER>
    For the calculation of the driving rain load, the contributions of the
:where 'rain' is the normal rain and 'wind velocity' is that component of the mean wind velocity (measured at a height of 10 m, in open area), which is orthogonal to the building surface. This component is determined from the scalar mean of the wind velocity (see above) and the wind direction distribution (see below).<BR> R1 and R2 are strongly dependent on the specific location on the building facade. If calculations are to be compared to actual measurements, these coefficients should be experimentally determined for that location.<BR> If they cannot be measured, only a very rough estimate is possible. For vertical surfaces, R1 is zero. R2 is about 0.2 s/m for free-standing locations without influence from surrounding buildings etc.; it is markedly less in the center of a facade (e.g. 0.07 s/m); it may even be greater at exposed locations of a building (near edges and corners)[1].&nbsp;<BR>
    different directions are determined individually and then summed up. Wind
 
    coming 'from behind' does not contribute to the rain load and is ignored.
 
    </DL>
* Driving rain / tipping bucket (<TT>real</TT>):
    &nbsp;<BR>
* Driving rain / droplet counter (<TT>real</TT>):<BR> &nbsp;<BR> the driving rain load on a west-facing wall, measured at a height of 1.50 m with a tipping bucket and a droplet counter rain gauge, respectively. In [Ltr/m&sup2;h] or, equivalently, [mm/h].<BR> &nbsp;<BR> WUFI uses the readings of the droplet counter, since it is in general more reliable.<BR> &nbsp;<BR> The values in this column can [[2D:Dialog_ClimateFileDetails | optionally]] be read and used for the variable 'rain' in the formula for the rain load (see above: normal rain). Set R1 to 1 and R2 to zero; the resulting rain load will then directly be the measured driving rain. &nbsp;<BR>
</LI>
 
</UL>
 
* <B>Wind direction distribution</B> (17 * <TT>integer</TT>):<BR>&nbsp;<BR> the frequency of wind directions, binned into sectors of 22.5&deg; each.<BR> &nbsp;<BR> The wind direction is averaged over 2 minutes and the counter of the corresponding sector then increased by one. A special counter is registering calms. The sum of all counts during one hour should thus be 30 if no interruption of the measurements has occured.<BR> &nbsp;<BR> The individual counters are assigned to the following directions:<BR> &nbsp;<BR>
<CENTER>NNE-NE-ENE-E-ESE-SE-SSE-S-SSW-SW-WSW-W-WNW-NW-NNW-N-calm</CENTER>
:For the calculation of the driving rain load, the contributions of the different directions are determined individually and then summed up. Wind coming 'from behind' does not contribute to the rain load and is ignored.&nbsp;


<P>
<P>
A *.WET file supplied by the user must be accompanied by a
A *.WET file supplied by the user must be accompanied by a [[Details:AGD-File | *.AGD file]] which contains geographical information on the climate location.
[[TheAGDFile.htm | *.AGD file]] which contains geographical information
on the climate location.
</P>
</P>



Aktuelle Version vom 25. März 2009, 09:18 Uhr

The *.WET Format for Climate Data

You can use existing IBP weather files (file format *.WET) to perform WUFI calculations; you can also convert your own weather data to that format and use them.

IBP weather files contain 21 lines of header which explain the meaning of the different data columns and an arbitrary number of lines with hourly weather data. WUFI skips the header.

Example:

WETexample.gif

(for formatting reasons, the data lines cannot be reproduced here in their entirety. Please refer to the file IBP1991.WET you received with WUFI for a complete example).

The format of the numbers is free; the only requirement is that a PASCAL program (like WUFI) must be able to read them.
The file need not conform to a specific column format (as in FORTRAN), the number of decimal places does not matter, floating point numbers need not be in exponential format etc.

The number type real/integer has to be adhered to, however. The individual numbers must be separated by blanks, not tabulators.

The fact that the floating point numbers in the example all start with a zero is irrelevant (they were created with a FORTRAN program which likes to write numbers this way).

The data in detail:

  • Day, month, year, hour (integer):
     
    The IBP files contain hourly mean values of the measured data. These time stamps indicate the point in time when each measuring interval of one hour was finished and the measured mean values recorded. I.e., the data line starting with 01 01 91 04 contains the mean values for the hour from 03:00 to 04:00 on January 1, 1991.
     
    Since its data are real-life data, an IBP weather file may contain an intercalary day (February 29). WUFI however knows nothing about intercalary days (at least in the present version). These must be deleted from files you want to use for WUFI calculations.
     
    The time count always refers to winter time (CET). There is no daylight saving time. 


  • Exterior air temperature (real):
     
    the temperature of the exterior ambient air in [°C]. It is used without change as the exterior air temperature in the WUFI calculation.  


  • Temperature of black surface (real):
  • Temperature of white surface (real):
     
    Surface temperatures of west-facing test facade elements painted black (as ~ 0.9) and white (as ~ 0.4), respectively.
    These may optionally be read instead of the exterior air temperature. 


  • Temperature of Ground Surface (real):
  • Temperature 50 cm below Ground Surface (real):
  • Temperature 1 m below Ground Surface (real):
     
    Soil temperatures at various depths in [°C].
    These may optionally be read instead of the exterior air temperature. 


  • Global radiation (real):
     
    the sum of the direct and diffuse components of the solar radiation incident on a horizontal surface; in [W/m²]. 


  • Diffuse radiation (real):
     
    the diffuse component of the solar radiation incident on a horizontal surface; in [W/m²].
     
    Subtracting the diffuse radiation from the global radiation results in the direct radiation. From this, the direct normal radiation can be calculated, i.e., the amount of radiation incident on a surface that is orthogonal to the ray direction. This calculation requires knowledge of the time and geographical location of the measurement, since the corresponding position of the sun has to be determined [2].
     
    The direct normal radiation can then be used to calculate the direct radiation incident on a surface with arbitrary orientation and inclination. Addition of the appropriate fraction of diffuse radiation results in the global radiation incident on the building component.
     
    These calculations are automatically done by WUFI during a simulation run.
     
    WUFI uses a simplified radiation model which treats the diffuse radiation as isotropic and ignores the albedo of the ground. If you are more demanding or want to allow for local specifics (like shadows etc.), you can perform the conversion yourself and feed the results to WUFI via a *.KLI file.  


  • Western radiation (real):
     
    the global radiation measured with a west-facing solarimeter; in [W/m²].
    Optionally, the radiation component impinging on a (west-facing) facade may directly be read from this column. No conversion is then necessary as would be the case if global and diffuse radiation were used as data source.  


  • Relative humidity (real):
     
    the relative humidity of the ambient air (0..1). Used by WUFI without change as the exterior relative humidity. 


  • Barometric pressure (real):
     
    the ambient air pressure reduced to sea level; in [hPA].  


  • Wind velocity (real):
     
    the scalar mean of the wind velocity; in [m/s]. It is needed to compute the driving rain from the normal rain.
     
    The scalar mean of the wind velocity is the mean value of the readings of an anemometer without the directions taken into account. For example, if for an hour the wind is blowing at 2 m/s but at the same time steadily travelling through all the direcions, then the scalar mean is 2 m/s, whereas the vectorial mean is 0 m/s.
     
    In the vectorial mean, some vector components may cancel. Thus, the scalar mean is greater than (or at least equal to) the vectorial mean.
     
    The IBP weather files also contain information about the distribution of the wind directions (see below). This allows to ignore components that come from 'behind' (and don't contribute to the rain load) and to weight the remaining directions according to the angle they make with the surface.  


  • Normal rain / tipping bucket (real):
  • Normal rain / droplet counter (real):
     
    the normal rain (i.e., the rain incident on a horizontal surface in open area) during one hour, measured with a tipping bucket and a droplet counter rain gauge, respectively; in [Ltr/m²h] or, equivalently, [mm/h].
     
    WUFI uses the readings of the droplet counter, since it is in general more reliable.
     
    The rain load on a wall is determined by the driving rain rather than the normal rain. The driving rain can be estimated from the normal rain and the wind velocity:
     
    The rain coefficients R1 and R2 in the dialog orientation, inclination and height serve to estimate the driving rain load on a surface of arbitrary orientation and inclination from data on normal rain, wind velocity and wind direction distributions, using the relation
     
    rain load = rain · (R1 + R2 · wind velocity),
where 'rain' is the normal rain and 'wind velocity' is that component of the mean wind velocity (measured at a height of 10 m, in open area), which is orthogonal to the building surface. This component is determined from the scalar mean of the wind velocity (see above) and the wind direction distribution (see below).
R1 and R2 are strongly dependent on the specific location on the building facade. If calculations are to be compared to actual measurements, these coefficients should be experimentally determined for that location.
If they cannot be measured, only a very rough estimate is possible. For vertical surfaces, R1 is zero. R2 is about 0.2 s/m for free-standing locations without influence from surrounding buildings etc.; it is markedly less in the center of a facade (e.g. 0.07 s/m); it may even be greater at exposed locations of a building (near edges and corners)[1]. 


  • Driving rain / tipping bucket (real):
  • Driving rain / droplet counter (real):
     
    the driving rain load on a west-facing wall, measured at a height of 1.50 m with a tipping bucket and a droplet counter rain gauge, respectively. In [Ltr/m²h] or, equivalently, [mm/h].
     
    WUFI uses the readings of the droplet counter, since it is in general more reliable.
     
    The values in this column can optionally be read and used for the variable 'rain' in the formula for the rain load (see above: normal rain). Set R1 to 1 and R2 to zero; the resulting rain load will then directly be the measured driving rain.  


  • Wind direction distribution (17 * integer):
     
    the frequency of wind directions, binned into sectors of 22.5° each.
     
    The wind direction is averaged over 2 minutes and the counter of the corresponding sector then increased by one. A special counter is registering calms. The sum of all counts during one hour should thus be 30 if no interruption of the measurements has occured.
     
    The individual counters are assigned to the following directions:
     
NNE-NE-ENE-E-ESE-SE-SSE-S-SSW-SW-WSW-W-WNW-NW-NNW-N-calm
For the calculation of the driving rain load, the contributions of the different directions are determined individually and then summed up. Wind coming 'from behind' does not contribute to the rain load and is ignored. 

A *.WET file supplied by the user must be accompanied by a *.AGD file which contains geographical information on the climate location.

Literature:

[1]Künzel, H.M.: Bestimmung der Schlagregenbelastung von Fassadenflächen.
IBP-Mitteilung 21 (1994), Nr. 263
[2]VDI 3789 Umweltmeteorologie, Blatt 2: Wechselwirkungen zwischen Atmosphäre und Oberflächen; Berechnung der kurz- und der langwelligen Strahlung.
Oktober 1994