All Case Studies
Showing 24 of 160 results
-
Rugged data loggers monitor world’s largest chameleon’s habitat | Tinytag
The Association Caméléon Center Conservation (CCC)–a Swiss non-profit association–carries out two conservation projects, in-situ and ex-situ, that contribute to the conservation and scientific knowledge of chameleons. These projects also aim to raise awareness of the vulnerability of these animals and the need to take action for their conservation.
-
Rugged, outdoor Tinytag data loggers provide temperature data for weather observation
Two Tinytag Plus 2 (TGP-4020) data loggers and one Tinytag Ultra 2 (TGU-4020) are used in Trevor Goodall’s weather observation station. The data contributes to Trevor’s personal weather record, as well as being sent to other weather observers and the local community.
-
Submersible data loggers monitor freshwater streams | Tinytag | Case Study
Freelance freshwater biologist, John Davy-Bowker, uses Tinytag Aquatic 2 data loggers in a long-term river monitoring project in Dorset. With three loggers each in two chalk streams, River Frome and River Piddle, John is able to accurately collect water temperature data and compare it to external water level data and macroinvertebrate samples.
-
Tinytag data loggers aid viticulture investigation into the growth of Riesling grapes
The quality of grapes used in wine production is influenced by a number of environmental factors. The topography of the land on which vines are cultivated, soil quality, levels of solar radiation, rainfall, wind and temperature and humidity all contribute to the taste of the grape and the quality of the final product: the wine.
-
Tinytag data loggers monitor wastewater samples for South West Water | Tinytag Case Study
About 95% of the water that South West Water supplies to Devon, Cornwall and small areas of Dorset and Somerset comes back to them for treatment and disposal (South West Water: Code of Practice on our Wastewater Service). Once wastewater has been treated, it can be released back into the environment, providing it has been treated to safe and acceptable levels.
-
Tinytag data loggers monitor temperature and humidity levels for Berkshire Record Office
It is critical for archive environments to maintain adequate environmental levels in areas where historical records are held. An unsuitable environment, including inappropriate temperature and humidity levels, can adversely impact the condition of precious materials, causing issues such as mould growth and accelerating the rate of material deterioration.
-
Cambridge University Hospital uses temperature data loggers to monitor pathology samples
The Pathology Department at Cambridge University Hospital processes over 3.5 million pathology samples every year. To ensure that these samples are kept under the correct conditions, Tinytag Transit 2 data loggers are used to monitor environments where the samples are handled and transported.
-
Long-term monitoring for museum preservation | Tinytag monitoring solutions
Rushden Transport Museum in Northamptonshire is uniquely situated in the Victorian-era Rushden Station. Housing a large collection of items relating to the history of road and rail transport, as well as the social history of the local area, the old station building and the Museum’s storage – a nearby port-a-cabin – are enigmatic surroundings for such collections – but are not ideal environments for displaying and storing sensitive museum collections.
-
Tinytag data logger used for Post-Occupancy Evaluation in West of Ireland Passive House
Passive House is a voluntary standard for energy efficiency in buildings. Buildings designed in accordance with Passive House standards typically have an ultra-low rate of energy usage, making them more environmentally-friendly than buildings that rely on active heating and cooling. For a new, domestic ‘Passive House’ in County Mayo, West of Ireland, temperature and relative humidity monitoring with a Tinytag data logger was crucial to understanding how the building performed in real, lived-in conditions.
-
Sub-Antarctic museum uses Tinytag data loggers for long-term monitoring and conservation
South Georgia Museum opened in 1992 in Grytviken, an old whaling station on South Georgia, an island in the polar front of the Southern Atlantic. The Museum is housed in the former Whaling Station Manager’s Villa and is home to an exciting collection of items that tell the story of the cultural heritage and natural history of South Georgia. The Museum’s collections include exhibitions on discovery, sealing, whaling, surveying and expeditions, maritime and military history, natural history and Sir Ernest Shackleton, the 20th Century Antarctic explorer.
-
Tinytag data loggers assist sustainable building project in Tanzania
In the UK, architects and engineers optimise building design to ensure that buildings are kept warm during the cold months. When British architects Andy Simmonds and Adele Mills of Simmonds Mills Architects were asked to design new housing and educational facilities for the Tanzanian Children’s Eco Village (run by UK based NGO, Islamic Help), they, alongside energy consultant Alan Clarke, came across the new challenge of optimising buildings for cooling in the year-round warm climate of Tanzania.
-
Underwater data loggers record seawater temperatures in marine monitoring programme
Non-native species (also referred to as introduced species) are species which have been introduced to a new environment by human activity. Tinytag Aquatic 2 data loggers are used to monitor seawater temperatures to assess how temperatures affect non-native populations at Orkney, an archipelago off the coast of Scotland.
-
Monitoring temperatures of Antarctic soil
As our climate changes, rising temperatures are having untold effects on the Earth’s ecosystems. A team of researchers from the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) have used Tinytag data loggers to investigate how increasing temperatures in maritime Antarctica could impact the growth of a decomposer fungus that inhabits Antarctic soil.
-
Plastics conservation at the Museum of Design in Plastics | Tinytag
Despite media reports telling us that plastics last forever, from a museum and conservation perspective, they are particularly sensitive materials that are vulnerable to slight fluctuations in environmental conditions.
-
Data loggers aid quality testing
Baker Ruskinn manufactures and markets medical incubated workstations which mimic the physiological conditions found inside the human body. The workstations regulate temperature, humidity and gas levels to simulate bodily environments, such as those existing within the heart, lungs, kidney or brain.
-
Tinytags monitor temperature in vaccine fridges and cool boxes
Maintaining recommended temperatures is essential to ensure the efficacy of vaccines; Tinytags record data to help verify that vaccines have been stored correctly and help meet SEQOHS accreditation standards for cold chain and vaccine storage.
-
Tinytag data loggers play key role in environmental management for district museum
Built over the remains of a Roman bathhouse, The Novium Museum in Chichester, West Sussex, is home to a collection of over 500,000 objects telling the rich history of Chichester District. Items in The Novium Museum’s collection include archaeological and geological objects, social history and photography. All of the artefacts held by the Museum must be kept in the correct conditions to ensure their best chances of survival for years to come.
-
Tinytag data loggers used to inform innovative energy solutions
With increasing pressure for electrical and heating appliances to meet energy efficiency ratings, it can be a challenge to find a solution that both works and is profitable for small businesses and enterprises.
-
PPE manufacturer uses Tinytag data loggers for quality control and quality validation
Reliable and trustworthy protective equipment is vital in the roles and industries that require it. Midas Safety have been manufacturing PPE (Personal Protective Equipment) for 35 years. Known as an OEM of gloves for industrial safety, the company is a leader in the field of protective clothing.
-
Tinytag data loggers help to ensure the effectiveness of vaccines at a Welsh medical practice
The Practice requires an efficient and reliable solution to monitoring the medical stock that is administered to their patients.Tinytag Talk 2 Medical data loggers provide that solution in three clinical fridges where vaccines are held.
-
Tinytag data loggers monitor reptile habitats in Costa Rica
Deforestation and habitat destruction present major threats to the Black-headed Bushmaster, but it is thanks to conservation work, using temperature and humidity data loggers, and dedicated ecological parks that the bushmaster continues to thrive both in its natural rainforest habitat and in captivity.
-
Tinytags aid the conservation of historic ships
Following great success from the monitoring programmes on board HMS Victory and HMS M.33, Tinytag Plus 2 data loggers have now been installed on HMS Warrior and HMS Trincomalee.
-
Tinytag data loggers used to help sea turtle conservation efforts
Two experiments were conducted by the Department of Biosciences at Swansea University to investigate the potential of using low-cost, low-technology techniques to mitigate the effects of increasing sand temperatures in the nesting locations of three turtle populations in St. Eustatius.