One of the things we do on the indoor probes is to hold the readings for up to 10 minutes. If you walk into range, then back to the condenser it will at least allow you to get the full report holding the last reading for 10 minutes. The metal building will play a big roll in blocking signals.
I was not experiencing readings being held for 10 minutes... They'd drop off the report when connection was lost it seemed. I haven't played with it much yet, but I got to thinking about it and I have (4) concrete block walls, (1) glass wall, and (1) stud wall in-between the area I was. So I'm still impressed it made it through all of that.
Hmnnn I defiantly thought that the FP probes would be able to handle any residential one distance issues? Let me know if there was something software related possibly. On a side note your set up is awesome
I thought I'd have no trouble as well, then I got to thinking about it and there's probably (4) concrete block walls in-between (I'm assuming that's the issue). I'll keep you posted with more real-world examples. My building is strange and not very realistic for most residential applications.
It may not be typical, but that is why we built the holding feature in the application. That way at least you can simply walk into range and get readings. The return and supply conditions do not change that fast that 10 minutes will effect the final outcome. For the first 25 years of my career, I had to walk indoors and out to get readings for the setup. This way at least you are cutting down on footsteps.