eQ 3 WS200US Wireless Weather Station User Manual Manual
eQ-3 Limited Wireless Weather Station Manual
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Manual
Operating Instructions Weather station „WS 200US“ ELV Electronics Ltd. · Hongkong These operating instructions belong with this product. They contain important information for putting it into service and operating it. This should be noted also when this product is passed on to a third party. Therefore look after these operating instructions for future reference! A list of contents with the corresponding page numbers can be found in the index on page 4. 1st English edition May 2006 Documentation © 2006 ELV Electronics Limited All rights reserved. This handbook must not be reproduced in any form, even in excerpts, or duplicated or processed using electronic, mechanical or chemical procedures without written permission of the publisher. This handbook may contain mistakes and printing errors. The information in this handbook is regularly checked and corrections made in the next issue. We accept no liability for technical mistakes or printing errors, or their consequences. All trademarks and patents are acknowledged. Printed in Hong Kong Modifications due to technical improvements may be made without prior notification. 00066548 Y2006 V1.0 Introduction Dear Customer, Thank you for purchasing this product. The product has been EMC-tested and thus meets the requirements of the valid national guidelines. See also FCC Information. In order to maintain this condition and ensure safe operation, you, as the user, have to observe this operating manual. Prior to using the product for the first time, please read the entire operating manual and observe all operating and safety instructions. We should already like to point out now the correct order for commissioning the products. Please also observe the installation and calibration instructions in this operating manual as well as the information about impairment of radio transmission between the sensors and base station. All company names and product descriptions listed herein are the trademarks of the respective manufacturers. All rights are reserved. Table of Contents Page 1. Intended Use..................................................................................................................... 6 2. Scope of Delivery.............................................................................................................. 6 3. Explanation of Symbols................................................................................................... 7 4. Features and Functions................................................................................................... 7 a) Base Station.................................................................................................................. 7 b) Multipurpose Sensor..................................................................................................... 9 c) Outdoor Sensor............................................................................................................ 9 5. Safety Instructions............................................................................................................ 9 6. Battery and Accumulator Information.......................................................................... 10 7. Preparation and Start-up............................................................................................... 11 a) b) c) d) Start-up of the Multipurpose Sensor.......................................................................... 11 Start-up of Other Sensors........................................................................................... 14 Start-up of the Base Station....................................................................................... 14 Registration of Sensors during Operation.................................................................. 15 8. Indications of the LC Display......................................................................................... 16 9. Configuration and Operation......................................................................................... 18 a) Basic Settings, Configuration..................................................................................... 18 Calling-up the configuration mode............................................................................. 19 Setting the date and time........................................................................................... 19 Entering degrees of latitude and longitude................................................................. 20 Setting the time zone.................................................................................................. 21 Assigning the march indication................................................................................... 21 Selecting the unit for the temperature indication........................................................ 22 Selecting the unit for the wind speed......................................................................... 22 Exiting the configuration mode................................................................................... 22 b) Operation ................................................................................................................... 23 Selecting the indoor temperature............................................................................... 23 Selecting the outdoor temperature............................................................................. 23 Selecting the outdoor sensor...................................................................................... 23 Indicating the MIN/MAX values.................................................................................. 23 Indicating the time/date for the single extreme value................................................. 24 Deleting the MIN/MAX values..................................................................................... 25 Setting the contrast of the LC display........................................................................ 25 Page c) Further Functions........................................................................................................ 26 Indication of the moon phases................................................................................... 26 Wiz Kid........................................................................................................................ 26 Weather forecast......................................................................................................... 26 Wind symbol indication (wind cone)........................................................................... 27 Comfort indicator........................................................................................................ 27 Frost warning.............................................................................................................. 27 Storm warning............................................................................................................ 27 10. Replacing the Battery..................................................................................................... 28 a) Base Station................................................................................................................ 28 b) Multipurpose Sensor, Outdoor Sensors..................................................................... 28 11. Troubleshooting.............................................................................................................. 29 12. Coverage......................................................................................................................... 31 13. Maintenance and Cleaning............................................................................................ 32 a) General........................................................................................................................ 32 b) Cleaning the Base Station.......................................................................................... 32 c) Cleaning the Multipurpose Sensor and the Outdoor Sensors.................................... 33 14. Handling........................................................................................................................... 34 a) General........................................................................................................................ 34 b) Base Station................................................................................................................ 34 c) Multipurpose Sensor................................................................................................... 34 15. Explanation of Terms...................................................................................................... 35 16. Disposal........................................................................................................................... 37 a) General........................................................................................................................ 37 b) Disposal Instructions for Batteries/Accumulators...................................................... 37 17. Technical Data................................................................................................................. 38 18. FCC-Information............................................................................................................. 39 Appendix A: Position table (longitude/latitude)................................................................ 40 Appendix B: Table of time zones...................................................................................... 58 19. Brief Instructions............................................................................................................ 59 1. Intended Use The Weather Station WS 200US is a high-quality universal weather measuring system which is able to process a large number of weather data and additional information and can indicate both current values and forecasts. All relevant data are simultaneously presented on the LC display, further data can be indicated by pressing a key. A special feature is the figure of the ”Wiz Kid”. The clothes he wears show the current outdoor temperature range, his hair and scarf reflect the range of the current wind speed and his umbrella indicates prognosticated rain. The forecasts of the basis station are to be considered orientation values. They do not represent an absolutely accurate prognosis. The manufacturer does not take over any responsibility for incorrect indications, measured values or weather forecasts and the consequences thereof. This product is designed for private use and is not suitable for medical purposes or for informing the public. The components of this product are not a toy, they contain fragile glass and ceramic parts. Set up all the components in such a manner that they are out of the reach of children. The product is operated by batteries. All external sensors transmit their data to the base station via radio in the range of 433 MHz (coverage up to 100m in the free field). Use other than that described above will lead to damage to the product. Please read the complete operating instructions before use. They contain important information for correct installation, functioning and operation. 2. Scope of Delivery • Weather Station WS 200US • Plastic foot for the weather station • Operating instructions 3. Explanation of Symbols The symbol with the lightening in the triangle is used when your health is at risk, e.g. through an electric shock An exclamation mark in a triangle indicates important information in these operating instructions which must be observed without fail. The ”hand” symbol can be found when you are to be given tips and information on operation. 4. Features and Functions a) Base Station Indication of indoor temperature and air humidity • temperature indication in °C or °F / air-humidity indication in % rH (% relative air humidity)) • can be switched to the indication of the inside dew point • storage of minimum/maximum temperatures with the corresponding times/dates of measurement • storage of minimum/maximum air humidity with the corresponding times/dates of measurement • Climatic comfort zone indicator • graphical representation of the march of temperature over the last 24 hours Indication of an outdoor sensor (temperature and air humidity) • indication of the data of the multipurpose sensor or of the 8 outdoor sensors for temperature/ air humidity • optional indication of temperature, dew point or perceived temperature (windchill) • storage of minimum and maximum temperatures with the corresponding times/dates of measurement • storage of minimum and maximum air humidity with the corresponding times/dates of measurement • Graphical representation of the march of temperature over the last 24 hours Indication of wind speed • wind speed indication with selectable units: km/h, m/s, mph • storage of the maximum wind speed values with the corresponding times/dates of measurement • additional graphical representation (wind cone) for light, moderate and strong winds Indication of the march of air pressure/indication of the tendency of air pressure • graphical representation of the pressure march over the last 24 hours • storage of the minimum and maximum air pressure values with the corresponding times/ dates of measurement • indication of the tendency of air pressure in 5 different steps: strongly increasing, increasing, unchanging, decreasing, strongly decreasing Symbol indication of the weather forecast • symbols for: rainy, cloudy, bright, sunny Indication of time and date • integrated quartz clock Indication of sunrise and sunset • based on the locations which are to be entered individually, a calculation is possible in the range from -60°N to +60°N Indication of the phases of the moon • indication of the current phase of the moon in 8 steps: new moon, waxing moon, full moon, waning moon (with intermediate steps) Warning functions • frost warning for a temperature decreasing below 4°C (symbol: ice crystal) • storm warning for a sharp air pressure decrease within a short period of time (symbol: danger sign) ”Wiz Kid” weather indicator Following the almost forgotten weather house, in which a person with an umbrella steps out of the door in case of bad weather and a person lightly dressed appears in case of good weather, the WS 200US is provided with the ”Wiz Kid”. The behaviour of this figure depends on various weather factors so that you can see at a glance which dressing you should put on if you want to go outside. This indicator does not only reflect the current measured values for outdoor temperature, air humidity and wind, but also the weather forecast data. Therefore, many different presentations and kinds of clothing of ”Wiz Kid” are provided and shown according to the weather situation. • The clothing of ”Wiz Kid” depends on the outdoor temperature measured at the multipurpose sensor and ranges from swimming shorts up to the complete winter dressing including a cap, a muffler and gloves. • At wind speeds higher than 20 km/h (moderate wind) the hair of ”Wiz Kid” blow in the wind and if he has put a muffler on – dependent on the temperature, too – it also blows in the wind. • If the weather forecast predicts rain, the ”Wiz Kid” will take his umbrella with him. b) Multipurpose Sensor • Radio transmission of: - wind speed - temperature - air humidity C) Outdoor Sensor • Radio transmission of: - temperature - air humidity 5. Safety Instructions The warranty will lapse for damage due to non-compliance with these operating instructions. We shall not be held liable for any consequential damage or loss! We shall not accept liability for damage to property or personal injury caused by incorrect handling or non-compliance with the safety instructions. Any claim to warranty will lapse in such cases. Dear Customer, the following safety and risk instructions are intended not only for the protection of your health but also for the protection of the device. Please read through the following points attentively: Do not use this product in hospitals or medical institutions. The outdoor sensor does only emit relatively weak radio signals. These radio signals could, however, lead to malfunctions in lifesupporting systems. The same may possibly apply to other areas. The weather station is only designed for dry rooms. Do not expose it to direct sunlight, high temperatures, coldness or excessive dampness and humidity. The multipurpose sensor (and separately/additionally available outdoor sensors) is suitable for operation in non-protected outdoor areas. For safety and licensing (CE) reasons, unauthorised conversion of and/or modifications to the product are not permitted. Do not leave packaging material lying around carelessly. Plastic foil/bags and polystyrene parts etc. could become dangerous toys for children. Handle the product with care. It can be damaged through impact, blows or by being dropped even from a low height. 6. Battery and Accumulator Information • Batteries/accumulators must be kept out of the reach of children. • Make sure that the batteries/accumulators are inserted with the correct polarity. • Do not leave the batteries/accumulators lying around in the open; there is a risk of their being swallowed by children or domestic animals. If swallowed, immediately contact a doctor. • Leaking or damaged batteries/accumulators can cause burning if they come into contact with the skin. For this reason you should use suitable protective gloves. • Make sure that batteries/accumulators are not short-circuited or thrown into a fire. There is a risk of explosion! • Never dismantle batteries/accumulators! • Batteries may not be recharged. There is a risk of explosion! • In case of longer periods of non-use (e.g. during storage) remove the inserted batteries/ accumulators to avoid damage by a leaking battery/accumulator. • Always replace the whole set of batteries/accumulators. Do not mix batteries/accumulators of different types/manufacturers. • Never mix batteries with accumulators! Please note: The weather station, multipurpose sensor and possibly used outdoor sensors can be operated by accumulators. However, due to the lower voltage of accumulators (accumulator = 1.2 V, battery = 1.5 V) the operating life can be decreased. Moreover, the radio coverage will be reduced, in rare cases even malfunctions can be caused. Therefore, the following rule applies: If you face any problem during the operation based on accumulators, use batteries instead of them. We recommend you to operate the weather station, multipurpose sensor and possibly existing outdoor sensors only with high-quality alkaline batteries. Please refer to chapter 16 for the environmental-friendly disposal of batteries and accumulators. 10 7. Preparation and Start-up Please note: First start up all provided sensors (multipurpose sensor and possibly existing outdoor sensors) (insert batteries) before starting up the weather station itself. If you fail to follow this order of proceeding, it may be that the base station is not able to identify the provided sensors! It is principally recommended to test the base station with all its sensors (supplied multipurpose sensor and possibly existing outdoor sensors) first in a room, before installing the sensors outside. The distance between the base station and the sensors must be at least 2m to avoid interference. Do not place the sensors side by side, but install them throughout the area (e.g. if you have purchased several additional sensors). If you find out that one of the sensors is not received after the installation, you can take it for granted that the radio reception is too weak. You avoid complex and time-consuming troubleshooting, if you perform this first functional test. a) Start-up of the Multipurpose Sensor • Open the housing of the multipurpose sensor. First, turn the lower cover of the housing a little bit towards the arrow as shown on the right (1) and then pull it carefully downwards (2). • There are two options to mount the sensor on a mast: 1. Own installation mast, e.g. purchased in the DIY superstore 2. Optionally available installation mast matched to the system (not included in the scope of delivery, is to be ordered separately) Fig. 1 11 Proceed as follows for mounting: 1. Own individual installation mast • Screw out the two small screws at the bottom of the multipurpose sensor a little bit. • Insert the supplied mounting rod of 25cm from into the multipurpose sensor the bottom in such a way that the two holes in the mounting rod are directly positioned under the screws. • Then tighten the two screws carefully (screws are to be screwed into the holes of the mounting rod). • The mast required must have a diameter of between 25mm and 45mm. It can either be a free mast or a mounting angle, e.g. for a satellite dish. supplied mounting rod supplied shaped aluminium part mounting clip installation mast • Position the shaped aluminium part on one side of this mast/mounting angle and put a hose band clip over the two parts. Fig. 2a • Set the short mounting rod of the sensor against the other side of the shaped aluminium part (on the right side in Figure 2 above) and tighten the hose band clip by using a screwdriver. 2. Optionally available installation mast (not included in the scope of delivery) If you want to drive the rod with the flat tip (serves as an earth tip) into the ground by means of a hammer, use a suited wooden clump in any case to protect the mast. Otherwise, the upper end of the rod will be damaged (installation of the sensor mast will not be possible any longer), guarantee will lapse! • Assemble the single parts of the sensor mast. Plastic couplers combine the individual rods. plastic coupler Fig. 2b • The flat rod end serves as an earth tip. 12 • After the installation of the mast, insert three batteries (AA/ Mignon) with the correct polarity into the battery compartment. You will find the corresponding image in the battery compartment (see also figure 3 on the right). If possible use alkaline batteries. As already described in chapter 6, accumulators can be used, too. They, however, can have a negative influence on the operating life, coverage and operational safety. • During the following 5 minutes, the sensor is in the so called synchronisation mode in which it sends one data package every 4 seconds. During this period of time you should insert the batteries into the base station so that it can identify the sensor. Fig. 3 • Then close the housing of the multipurpose sensor again, slide the cover upwards and lock it by turning it to the right (reverse direction than shown in Fig. 1). • To avoid unnecessary long ways for checking the functions, the final positioning, e.g. in the garden, should be performed only after a successfully completed functional test as described at the beginning of this chapter. The correct location of the multipurpose sensor is decisive for obtaining the most accurate measuring values. The temperature sensor inside the housing of the multipurpose sensor is positioned at the top below the ”umbrellas” in a ventilated area of the housing. Therefore, in direct sunlight only a slightly higher temperature value will be measured. Please ensure that the wind sensor at the tip of the multipurpose sensor is not positioned too close to houses, trees etc., because this could falsify the measured values of the wind speed. That’s why, the multipurpose sensor should be set up in a free space, e.g. in the garden. • The mast must firmly stick in the soil with the multipurpose sensor being positioned approximately 2 m above the ground. When selecting the place of installation, consider the safety for children, pets, vehicles etc. If the multipurpose sensor falls down, there is risk of injury or damage to vehicles or other objects. Make sure that there are no pipes (e.g. hose pipes for irrigating systems or similar) at the place where the earth rod is inserted/driven into the ground. 13 b) Start-up of Other Sensors If you want to use several additional temperature/air humidity sensors suited to the Weather Station WS 200US, insert the batteries into the sensor(s) now. A maximum number of 8 of such sensors can be operated. The installation, addressing and start-up of the sensor is to be performed according to their operating instructions. c) Start-up of the Base Station The base station is designed to indicate all registered and calculated data on a clearly arranged LC display. The sensors for indoor use (temperature, air humidity, air pressure) are also included in the housing of the base station. For this reason, ensure during the start-up or installation of the base station that a heating or ventilation system (e.g. an air-conditioning system) is not in its proximity, because false data could be indicated in such a case. Avoid direct sunlight, too! Keep to the following order of steps during the start-up: • Open the battery compartment on the back side of the base station (remove the foot first, if necessary!). • Insert four batteries (AA/Mignon) in the battery compartment paying attention to the correct polarity. You will find the corresponding image in the battery compartment (see also figure 4 on the right). If possible use alkaline batteries. As already described in chapter 6, accumulators can be used, too. They, however, can have a negative influence on the operating life, coverage and operational safety. • Close the battery compartment again. • If the batteries are inserted, all segments of the LC display will be shown briefly. Fig. 4 • Afterwards, the base station activates the synchronisation mode for 15 minutes. In this period of time all sensors received will be indicated one after the other. 14 If all your installed sensors have already been received, you can cause a premature exit of the synchronisation mode by pressing any button, provided that all sensors have already completed their own synchronisation mode. If you face any problem in the identification of one sensor, you should wait as long as the synchronisation time is finished. This process takes 15 minutes. • After the synchronisation, the normal display of all weather data is shown. Only sunrise and sunset as well as the phase of the moon have not been indicated yet, because time and data are to be set before. • Configure the base station as described in chapter 9 ”Configuration and Operation”. • The base station can either be hung up on the wall (a suited opening is provided on the back side) or placed on a foot onto a surface. If you drive a nail into the wall or drill a hole for a plug with screw for this purpose, pay attention that no power, gas or water pipes can be damaged, grave danger! • If you want to use the foot, first put the front central spike of the foot into the supports on the back side of the base station. Then, swing the foot a little bit back till the two rear spikes lock into the catch supports at the bottom of the base station. d) Registration of Sensors during Normal Operation When starting up the product, all available suited sensors are registered at the base station in the synchronisation mode and then received during normal operation (time required for the synchronisation of the base station takes about 15 minutes after inserting the batteries, time required for the synchronisation of the sensors takes about 5 minutes after inserting the batteries). To register further new, additionally purchased sensors (or sensors lost during the battery replacement) you do not need to follow the procedure of the initial start-up. All data saved (minimum and maximum values, time etc.) would be lost during this kind of proceeding. Every day, the base station performs a synchronisation test at 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. so that it can identify new sensors (or a sensor with battery replacement) automatically. But if the new sensor is not indicated, the problem may be found in the coverage (see chapter 12 ”Coverage”). 15 8. Indications of the LC Display 17 16 15 15 18 14 19 20 13 12 11 10 16 1 indoor temperature indoor air humidity comfort zone indicator (for indicating comfortable/uncomfortable climate) indication of the air pressure tendency graphical presentation of the march (history), according to the unit selected indication of empty battery (”LoBat”) time and date indication sunset time sunrise time 10 current wind speed 11 current air-humidity value of the selected outdoor sensor 12 sensor number (no indication, if the multipurpose sensor has been selected) 13 current temperature value of the selected outdoor sensor 14 analogue temperature indication of the multipurpose sensor 15 symbols for the weather forecast (sunny, bright, cloudy, rainy) 16 animated ”Wiz Kid” symbol 17 symbol for the phase of the moon 18 additional graphical representation (wind cone) for light, moderate and strong winds 19 bad weather warning 20 frost warning Control key functions in normal operation (see chapter ”Configuration” for further functions): IN Switching the indoor temperature indication between temperature/dew point SENSOR Selection of the outdoor sensor MIN/MAX Selection of the minimum or maximum value indication RESET No function OUT Switching the outdoor temperature indication between temperature/dew point/windchill Other symbols/terms: Indicates that this value is presented in the march indication (5) DEWPOINT Dew point WIND CHILL Perceived temperature MIN/MAX Minimum or maximum indication is active 17 9. Configuration and Operation When the batteries have been inserted into the sensors and the batteries have been inserted subsequently into the base station (this order is to be strictly followed), the data transmitted via radio by the sensors should appear in the LC display of the base station. a) Basic Settings, Configuration The following settings are still required for operation: • year, month, day, hour, minute • latitude and longitude degrees of your location • time zone Only after these settings, the phase of the moon, MIN-/MAX-data and the sunrise/ sunset times as well as the date and time will be indicated. Additional setting options: • assignment of the march indication (air pressure, indoor or outdoor temperature; standard: air pressure) • unit of the temperature measurement (standard: °C) • unit of the wind speed measurement (standard: km/h) In the configuration mode the keys have the following functions: Imprint Function IN SENSOR MIN/MAX EXIT RESET OUT NEXT Description (not used, no function) Decrease value Exit the configuration mode Increase value Go to next setting This key layout is also given on the back side of the weather station. 18 F Please note: If you press the + or - key during the individual settings a little bit longer, the values will be changed rapidly. After each setting procedure you can exit the configuration mode by pressing the EXIT key or you can go the the next setting by activating the NEXT key. The configuration is performed according to the following order: year Æ month Æ day Æ minutes Æ hours Æ latitude degree (LA = latitude) Æ Längengrad (LO = “Longitude”) Æ Zeitzone (ti) Æ assignment of the march indication Æ temperature unit Æ wind unit Afterwards, the setting order restarts from the beginning. Calling-up the configuration mode IN >2 seconds Press the IN key for approx. 2 seconds till the display changes. The configuration mode can be closed at any time by pressing the EXIT key (= MIN/MAX). See ”Exiting the Configuration Mode”. Setting the date and time year month day minutes hours NEXT NEXT NEXT NEXT NEXT Set the current year via the + and - keys. Press the NEXT key. Set the month via the + and - keys. Press the NEXT key. Set the day via the + and - keys. Press the NEXT key. Set the minutes via the + and - keys. Press the NEXT key. Set the hours via the + and - keys. Press the NEXT key, afterwards you can set the latitude degree (in the display appears LA = latitude). See next page. 19 Entering the degrees of latitude/longitude The entry of the location of the weather station is required for the calculation of sunrise and sunset times. The degree of latitude can be entered in the range from -60.0° to +60.0°. The degree of longitude can be entered in the range from 0.0° to 360.0°. The position of Washington D.C. is programmed by the manufacturer. You can determine your location in different ways: • You find a table with the coordinates of all US counties in the chapter ”Position Table”. Select a town close to you and enter its coordinates. • If you possess a GPS navigation device, e.g. in your car or a mobile one, you can take over its location information and then you have your exact position. • You can also get the exact coordinates via the Internet. It provides numerous pages which contain information on navigation. Please consider the fact that the data for sunrise or sunset are only exact at the sea or for a totally even landscape. Hills, high forests etc. alter these values for your location. Even for ideal positions the data may vary by some minutes, because an approximation formula is used for the calculation. latitude NEXT NEXT 20 Set the degree of latitude via the + and - keys. For example: 52.5°, entry: 525 Press the NEXT key. Afterwards, the degree of longitude can be entered. In the display these data are indicated by LO (= longitude). longitude Set the degree of longitude via the + and - keys. For example: 13.4°, entry: 0134 Press the NEXT key. Now, set the time zone. ”ti” is faded into the display. Setting the time zone The entry of the time zone is required for the calculation of sunrise and sunset times. Enter the difference to the GMT (Greenwich Mean Time) = UTC (Universal Time). In the appendix is a table showing the time zone difference from UTC for North America time zones. time zone Set the current value for your time zone via the + and - keys. close the configuration mode Press the EXIT key to close the configuration mode and turn back to the normal mode. Afterwards, the base station is in normal operating mode. extended configurations Press the NEXT key to set further values if required. See below. EXIT or NEXT To ensure the correct functioning of the weather station, all settings required have been performed at this point. The extended settings are not necessary for normal operation. Assigning the march indication The following representations can be assigned to the course indication: • air pressure • indoor temperature • outdoor temperature If the march indication is assigned to one of the two temperature indications, the symbol “ ” appears additionally in the corresponding display field. Fading-in/Identification in the display field: P = air pressure O = outdoor temperature I = indoor temperature NEXT assigning the march direction Select the assignment desired via the + and - keys. Press the NEXT key. Now, the unit of the temperature indication can be selected. 21 Selecting the unit for the temperature indication The following units can be selected: °C °F NEXT unit for temperature indication grade Centigrade (basic setting) grade Fahrenheit Here, the indication is presented with the analogue temperature indication, in the normal operating mode in all temperature display fields. Select the unit desired for indicating the temperature via the + and - keys. Press the NEXT key. Now, the unit of the wind speed can be selected. Selecting the unit for the wind speed The following units can be selected: km/h = m/s mph = kilometres per hour meters per second miles per hour The indication is given in the WIND field. NEXT unit for wind speed Select the unit desired for indicating the wind speed via the + and - keys. If you press the NEXT key, the year will appear again and the order of entries will start from the beginning. Now, you could either check or change the entries. Exiting the configuration mode EXIT Press the EXIT key to close the entry. This can be done at any position, e.g. after entering the time. The data already entered will be saved automatically. 22 b) Operation Selecting the indoor temperature indication In the normal operation mode, the indoor temperature and air humidity are presented in the IN display field. Press the IN key repeatedly to switch between • indoor temperature • corresponding dew point (= DEWPOINT) Selecting the outdoor temperature indication In the normal operation mode, the outdoor temperature and air humidity are presented in the OUT display field. Press the OUT key repeatedly to switch between • outdoor temperature • corresponding dew point (= DEWPOINT) • perceived temperature (= WINDCHILL) Selecting the outdoor sensor In the Sensor display field the currently selected outdoor sensor and its sensor number are shown. Only active sensors (received in the synchronisation phase) are indicated. To select the outdoor sensors or the multi-purpose sensor, press the SENSOR key as often as it is required to indicate the sensor number desired. • For the outdoor sensors 1-8 the corresponding sensor number (1-8) is displayed. • For the multipurpose sensor a sensor number will not displayed, the faded in SENSOR (beside the outdoor air humidity) will disappear. Indicating the MIN/MAX values The minimum and maximum values obtained for the measured values of the indoor/outdoor temperatures and air humidity since the last deletion of data are saved. For the wind speed measurement, only the MAX value is saved. All MIN and MAX values are saved together with the corresponding times and dates of the extreme values. If the MIN/MAX keys are pressed several times, the display will switch between the indication of the minimum values, the indication of the maximum values and the normal display. 23 Proceed as follows for calling up the saved data: • Calling up minimum values Press the MIN/MAX key. MIN appears in the centre of the display. Now, the minimum values are indicated in the corresponding display fields. For the wind speed a value will not be given (because the minimum value would always be ”0”). • Calling up maximum values Press the MIN/MAX key once again (starting from the normal display press the key twice). MAX appears in the centre of the display. The maximum values are indicated in the corresponding display fields. • Go back to normal display If you press the MIN/MAX key again, you go back to the normal display, MAX appears in the display. Indicating the time/date for the single extreme value If required, you can indicate the time and date at which each single value was measured. Proceed as follows: • First, select either the indication of the minimum values (press the MIN/MAX key once, MIN is shown in the LC display) or the indication of the maximum values (press the MIN/MAX key twice, MAX is shown in the LC display). • Now, the value desired can be displayed by pressing the SENSOR key several times. Order of indication: indoor temperature Æ indoor air humidity Æ outdoor temperature Æ outdoor air humidity Æ wind speed (MAX value only) Each time, only one display field is shown with its extreme value, at the bottom the point of time and date appear at which the extreme value was measured. • By a next pressure on the SENSOR key you come back to the overview display of all extreme values (MIN or MAX, depending on your selection of the minimum or maximum values). 24 Deleting the MIN/MAX values The extreme values can either be deleted in the group (all minimum or all maximum values) or individually. Delete single value • Press the MIN/MAX key once to display the minimum values or twice to display the maximum values. • Select the value you want to delete by activating the SENSOR key. • Press and hold the RESET key longer than two seconds to delete the value selected. Delete group • Press the MIN/MAX key once to display the minimum values or twice to display the maximum values. • Press the RESET key longer than two seconds to delete the group selected. Setting the contrast of the LC display The contrast of the LC display can be set according to your requirements. For doing this, an opening for setting the contrast is located between the suspending ear and the battery compartment on the back side of the weather station. Using a small flat-blade screwdriver you can set the desired display contrast. Do not use force in doing so, turn the setting controller very carefully! 25 c) Further Functions Indication of the moon phase The moon phases are indicated by the following symbols: full moon waxing moon new moon waning moon Fig. 7 The indication of the moon phases will only be displayed, if time/date are entered. Wiz Kid As an animated figure the ”Wiz Kid” shows several weather factors simultaneously: • Outdoor temperature (multipurpose sensor only) Depending on the outdoor temperature measured at the multipurpose sensor, the clothing of ”Wiz Kid” change from swimming shorts to complete winter clothing including a cap, a muffler and gloves. • Rain If the weather forecast predicts rain, the ”Wiz Kid” will take his umbrella with him. • Wind speed At wind speeds of more than 20km/h (moderate wind) the hair of ”Wiz Kid” blows in the wind. If he has put on a scarf, this one will also blow in the wind. Weather forecast The symbols describing the weather forecast of the weather station are positioned at the top of the display and deliver the following prognoses: 26 clouds with rain ➜ rainy clouds ➜ cloudy clouds with sun ➜ bright sun ➜ sunny Wind symbol indication (wind cone) The wind cone symbol shows at a glance whether the wind is light, moderate or strong at the moment. wind cone hangs down ➜ light wind (< 10km/h) wind cone is lifted to half the height ➜ moderate wind (1…20km/h) wind cone is standing horizontally strong wind (> 20km/h) ➜ Comfort indicator The comfort indicator (J K L) reflects the room air conditions (relationship of temperature to air humidity). Please refer to the chapter ”Explanation of Terms” for finding a value table of the indication ranges. Frost warning The frost warning (ice crystal symbol) will be displayed, if the temperature decreases below 4°C. The frost warning will be deactivated as soon as the temperature increases above 5°C. Storm warning The storm warning (danger signal symbol) will be activated, if the air pressure decreases considerably within a short period of time. As soon as the air pressure increases again above 5°C the frost warning will be deactivated. 27 10. Replacing the Battery The replacement interval varies significantly for batteries and accumulators. Highquality alkaline batteries are the most efficient ones, whereas accumulators or cheap zinc-carbon batteries require a more frequent replacement. a) Base Station If the battery empty symbol ( ) is displayed, the batteries have to be replaced. • Always replace the whole set of batteries. • Never mix full and semi-full batteries. • Always use four batteries of the same type and manufacturer. • Never use batteries and accumulators together. • As already mentioned before, the station can be operated by accumulators, but if batteries are used, the operating time will be much longer. • Proceed as described in chapter 7 c) to replace the batteries. Please note: After replacing the batteries, all data/values saved in the base station (e.g. time, data etc.) are deleted and have to be entered anew. b) Multipurpose Sensor, Outdoor Sensors If the indication of the individual sensor is not displayed over a period of more than 24 hours, the batteries are to be replaced as described in chapters 7a) and b). 28 Check, if the failed data transfer is caused by an interfered radio transmission. In this case an indication will not be given in the display of the base station neither. Another possible source of the problem could be for example a metal part placed in the radio line. Such a problem can be detected by the fact that the data transmission of other sensors being closer positioned also fail. (See chapter 11 on next page.) 11. Troubleshooting Observe all safety instructions included in these operating instructions! Problem Possible solutions No reception • The distance between the base station and the outdoor sensors is too long. Change the place of installation of the outdoor sensors. • Objects or shielding materials impair the radio reception. Change the place of installation of the outdoor sensors and the base station. • The batteries of the outdoor sensors are weak or almost empty. As a test, insert new batteries into the outdoor sensors. • Another transmitter at the same or adjacent frequency interferes the radio signal of the outdoor sensors. This could be wireless phones, wireless loudspeakers or similar systems. In most cases, such products are not operated continuously. That means that the radio reception will be perfect on the following day and its more difficult to detect the cause of the problem. If it is possible, set another frequency for these devices. This step can eliminate the reception problem of the weather station. Interference of other devices by the outdoor sensors • The outdoor sensors emit their data to the base station at intervals of approximately 3 minutes for the duration of 0.1 second (100ms). In this short period of time other devices are possibly interfered. For example, a very short interfering signal can be heard in a wireless phone every 3 minutes. Problems during synchronisation • When the batteries are inserted into the outdoor sensors and the base station (keep strictly to this order of proceeding!!), these devices are in the synchronisation mode. Here, a data telegram is emitted every 4 seconds. This accelerates the detection and registration process of the outdoor sensors at the base station. To force a new synchronisation, take the batteries out of the base station and the outdoor sensors. Afterwards, wait at least 50 seconds before inserting the batteries again into the outdoor sensors and finally in the base station (this sequence is to be observed in any case, first insert the batteries into all the existing outdoor sensors and only then insert the batteries into the base station). However, all the data/values saved in the base station (e.g. minimum values, maximum values, but also dates and times) will be lost then. • Before installing the outdoor sensors for example in your garden, carry out a functional test as described at the beginning of chapter 7. 29 Problem Possible solutions Sunrise/sunset times are not indicated • The base station has not been configured. Configure the base station according to the chapter ”Configuration”. Sunrise/sunset times are wrongly indicated • The longitude or latitude is set incorrectly. Enter the correct position (chapter ”Configuration”). • Time zone is set incorrectly. Enter the correct time zone for your position (chapter ”Configuration”). • The date is wrong. Enter the correct date (chapter ”Configuration”). Minimum and maximum values are not indicated • The base station has not been configured. Configure the base station according to the chapter ”Configuration”. Set the time and date. Moon phase is not indicated • The base station has not been configured. Configure the base station according to the chapter ”Configuration”. Set the time and date. 30 12. Coverage The coverage of the transmission of the radio signals to the base station can reach up to 100m under optimal conditions. This is also often designated as ”free-field coverage”. This ideal arrangement (e.g. base station and outdoor sensor on a plane, even meadow without trees, houses etc.), however, is never reality. Normally, the base station is installed inside the house, the multipurpose sensor in the garden and further outdoor sensors are positioned in outbuildings (e.g. in a aviary) or in the garage. The coverage can be considerably limited by: • walls, reinforced concrete ceilings • coated/vapour-deposited insulating glass panes • vehicles • trees, brushes, earth, rocks • the proximity to metallic & conductive objects (e.g. heating elements) • the proximity to the human body • broad-band interference, e.g. in residence areas (DECT telephones, mobile phones, wireless loudspeakers, other radio weather stations, baby phones etc.) • the proximity to electric motors, transformers, power supply units, computers • the proximity to improperly shielded or uncovered operating computers or other electric appliances However, a guarantee for a specific coverage is not possible as the local circumstances are different for different places of installation. If the base station does not receive data from the multipurpose sensor or from possibly additional other sensors (despite new batteries), reduce the distance between the outdoor sensors and the base station, change the place of installation. 31 13. Maintenance and Cleaning a) General Check the technical safety of the weather station, such as damage to the housing, at regular intervals. When it can be assumed that a safe operation is no longer possible, the product must be put out of service and precautions taken to ensure that it is not used unintentionally. Remove the batteries. It must be assumed that safe operation is not possible any longer, if • the station is visibly damaged, • the device does not operate any longer and • it has been stored for long periods under unfavourable conditions or • it has been subject to considerable stress in transit. The safety instructions below must be observed before the weather station is cleaned or maintained: Before cleaning, servicing or repair works, the batteries must be removed. None of the components inside the station is to be maintained by the user. The housing must not be opened. Repair work must always be carried out by qualified experts familiar with the hazards involved and with the relevant regulations. b) Cleaning the Base Station Dust may be removed easily by using a vacuum cleaner and a clean, soft brush. Hold the opening of the vacuum cleaner close to the base station (do not contact it, scratches could be caused!) and remove the dust by means of the brush. The vacuum cleaner soaks up the dust that has been blown up. A soft, dry and lint-free cloth can also be used to clean the outside of the product. For more resistant dirt, you may moisten the cloth slightly in lukewarm water. Never use aggressive cleaning agents or chemical solutions, which could damage the housing or even impair operation. 32 c) Cleaning the Multipurpose Sensor and the Outdoor Sensors After a longer period of operation in the open, dust can deposit at the plastic surface of the outdoor sensors. It can be removed rapidly with a cloth slightly moistened in water. Never use a garden hose to clean the outdoor sensors, because they are only protected against rain coming from the sky above but not against jets of water coming from the sides or below. 33 14. Handling Observe all safety instructions included in these operating instructions! a) General The product may not be opened or disassembled (apart from the battery replacement described in these operating instructions). None of the components inside the product is to be maintained by the user. Moreover, the licence (CE) and warranty will lapse in such cases. Do not drop the product, it will be damaged even if it falls down from a low height. b) Base Station Avoid the following unfavourable ambient conditions during the operation of the base station: damp or air humidity which is too high extreme cold or heat direct sunlight dust or combustible gases, vapours or solvents strong vibrations strong magnetic fields such as those found in the vicinity of machinery or loudspeakers. Do not use the product immediately after it has been taken from a cold environment to a warm one. The condensation water produced may destroy the product. Wait until the base station has reached room temperature. This may take several hours! Select such a place of installation that the base station stands safely and cannot fall down. There is risk of injury due to its weight. You should protect scratch-sensitive or valuable furniture surfaces by means of suited supports before setting up the base station. c) Multipurpose Sensor Although the multipurpose sensor is protected against rain coming from above, it is not protected against water from the sides or below. Therefore, never splash the station, e.g. by means of a garden hose or another irrigation system. Select such a place of installation that children can not tilt the multipurpose sensor. Do not set it up in the proximity of vehicles, glass doors/windows or similar objects! 34 15. Explanation of Terms Perceived temperature See “Windchill” Comfort indicator The symbols of the comfort indicator (the three different smilies (L air conditions and will be shown according to the following table: Temperature Humidity 20% 30% 35% <18°C 18 -19.9°C 20 -21.9°C 22 -23.9°C 24 -25.9°C 26 -27.9°C > 28°C K J) reflect the room 40% 45% 50% 55% 60% 65% 70% Depending on the relationship between temperature and air humidity, clearly limited areas of comfortable or uncomfortable air conditions can be defined. At a temperature of 25°C an air humidity below 30% is perceived to be too dry (e.g. heating air) and a humidity above 60% to be sultry. Dew point The dew point is a point of temperature which depends on the coincidence of a certain air pressure, temperature and air humidity. At this point of temperature the condensation of the air humidity starts, the so called dewing, the air humidity condenses out and settles in form of a liquid (mist, vapour). If the dew point for the water vapour is below 0°C, it condenses as snow or hoar. Weather forecast The weather forecast of the weather station is reflected in different weather symbols which are calculated from the rate of increase or decrease of the air pressure (tendency). This changing rate of the air pressure is the decisive factor for the forecast of the weather to be expected, the absolute value plays only a secondary role here. Generally one can say that an increasing air pressure means better weather, whereas a decreasing air pressure means that the weather will become worse. 35 Windchill (equivalent temperature, perceived temperature) Under certain conditions, men perceive temperatures totally different than shown by a thermometer. At low temperatures, we perceive the temperature at our naked skin the lower the more rapidly an additional wind blows. The windchill is defined as a cooling effect for naked skin having a theoretical surface temperature of 33°C and at a wind speed of more than 2.6m/s. The higher the wind speed and the lower the actual ambient temperature, the more perceptible is the windchill effect. The ”perceived temperature” can almost be compared to the so called felt temperature which additionally considers such effects as the radiation of sunlight, the luminous reflectance of the clouds, the light wave length etc.. Wind speed table (Beaufort) Beaufort Wind speed 0 – 0.7km/h 0.7 – 5.4km/h 5.5 – 11.9km/h 12.0 – 19.4km/h 19.5 – 28.5km/h 5 28.6 – 38.7km/h 6 38.8 – 49.8km/h 49.9 – 61.7km/h 61.8 – 74.6km/h 74.7 – 88.9km/h 10 89.0 – 102.4km/h 11 102.5 – 117.4km/h 12 > 117.4km/h 36 Designation calm very soft breeze light breeze weak breeze moderate breeze fresh breeze strong wind stiff wind stormy wind storm heavy storm violent storm hurricane 16. Disposal a) General Once the product becomes unusable, dispose of it in accordance with the relevant statutory regulations. b) Disposal Instructions for Battery/Accumulators You, as the ultimate consumer, are required by law (Battery Ordinance) to return all spent batteries/accumulators. Disposing of spent batteries/accumulators in the household waste is prohibited! Batteries/accumulators containing hazardous substances are marked by the opposite symbols. These symbols also indicate that it is prohibited to dispose of these batteries in the household waste. The heavy metals concerned are: Cd=cadmium, Hg=mercury, Pb=lead (the designation is written on the accumulator e.g. under the rubbish can symbols depicted at the left). You can hand in your used batteries/accumulators at the official collection points of your community at no cost, at our outlets or everywhere where batteries/accumulators are sold. You thus fulfil your statutory obligations and contribute to the protection of the environment. 37 17. Technical Data Measurement interval of the outdoor sensors:... approx. 3 minutes Measurement interval of the indoor sensors:...... approx. 10 minutes Transmitting frequency:....................................... 433.92 MHz Coverage in the open field:................................. max. 100m (Observe chapter 12!) Inside temperature range: .................................. 0°C to +59.9°C Resolution:.......................................................... 0.1°C Accuracy:............................................................ ±0.8°C Outdoor temperature range (multipurpose sensor):......................................... -29.9°C to +79.9°C Resolution:.......................................................... 0.1°C Accuracy:............................................................ ±0.8°C Measurement range of relative air humidity (indoor/outdoor):.................................................. 1% - 99 % Resolution:.......................................................... 1% Accuracy:............................................................ ±5% rH (30–70% rH) Wind speed:........................................................ 0 to 200km/h Resolution:.......................................................... up to100km/h 0.1km/h; above 100km/h: 1km/h Voltage supply: Base station:........................................................ 4 x 1.5 V batteries, AA, Mignon, (alkaline type recommended) Multipurpose sensor:........................................... 3 x 1.5 V batteries, AA, Mignon (alkaline type recommended) Dimensions (W x H x D) base station:................. approx. 136mm * 198mm * 35mm (without foot) 38 18. FCC Information FCC ID: RNT-WS200US Changes or modifications not expressly approved in writing by ELV Electronics Limited may void the user’s authority to operate the equipment. NOTE: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures: - Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. - Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver. - Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected. - Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. The internal antenna used for this mobile transmitter must provide a separation distance of at least 20 cm from all persons and must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter. This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) this device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. 39 Appendix A: Table of latitude/longitude for US counties. State AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AL AK AK AK AK AK AK AK AK AK AK AK AK AK AK AK AK AK County Autauga County Baldwin County Barbour County Bibb County Blount County Bullock County Butler County Calhoun County Chambers County Cherokee County Chilton County Choctaw County Clarke County Clay County Cleburne County Coffee County Colbert County Conecuh County Coosa County Covington County Crenshaw County Cullman County Dale County Dallas County DeKalb County Elmore County Escambia County Etowah County Fayette County Franklin County Geneva County Greene County Hale County Henry County Houston County Jackson County Jefferson County Lamar County Lauderdale County Lawrence County Lee County Limestone County Lowndes County Macon County Madison County Marengo County Marion County Marshall County Mobile County Monroe County Montgomery County Morgan County Perry County Pickens County Pike County Randolph County Russell County St. Clair County Shelby County Sumter County Talladega County Tallapoosa County Tuscaloosa County Walker County Washington County Wilcox County Winston County Aleutians East Borough Aleutians West Anchorage Municipality Bethel Bristol Bay Borough Denali Borough Dillingham Fairbanks North Star Borough Haines Borough Juneau City and Borough Kenai Peninsula Borough Ketchikan Gateway Borough Kodiak Island Borough Lake and Peninsula Borough Matanuska-Susitna Borough Nome Census Area North Slope Borough 40 Latitude 32.5 30.6 31.9 33.0 34.0 32.1 31.7 33.7 32.9 34.2 32.9 32.0 31.7 33.3 33.6 31.4 34.7 31.4 33.0 31.3 31.7 34.2 31.4 32.4 34.5 32.6 31.1 34.0 33.7 34.5 31.1 32.8 32.8 31.5 31.2 34.8 33.5 33.8 34.9 34.6 32.6 34.8 32.2 32.4 34.7 32.3 34.1 34.3 30.7 31.6 32.3 34.5 32.6 33.3 31.8 33.3 32.4 33.7 33.3 32.6 33.4 32.9 33.2 33.8 31.4 32.0 34.2 55.1 52.3 61.2 60.9 58.7 63.9 59.2 64.8 59.2 58.4 60.3 55.4 57.7 58.6 61.8 64.8 70.6 Longitude 273.4 272.3 274.7 272.9 273.4 274.3 273.3 274.2 274.7 274.4 273.3 271.7 272.2 274.2 274.5 274.0 272.3 273.0 273.8 273.6 273.7 273.2 274.4 272.9 274.2 273.8 272.8 274.0 272.2 272.2 274.2 272.0 272.4 274.7 274.6 274.1 273.2 271.9 272.4 272.7 274.7 273.0 273.3 274.3 273.4 272.2 272.1 273.7 271.9 272.6 273.7 273.1 272.7 271.9 274.1 274.6 274.9 273.7 273.3 271.8 273.8 274.2 272.5 272.7 271.8 272.7 272.6 198.0 187.5 210.2 198.8 203.2 210.9 201.4 212.4 224.5 225.5 209.0 228.4 207.3 203.6 210.5 195.7 206.1 AK AK AK AK AK AK AK AK AK AK AZ AZ AZ AZ AZ AZ AZ AZ AZ AZ AZ AZ AZ AZ AZ AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR AR Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. 27 Northwest Arctic Borough Prince of Wales Sitka City and Borough Skagway-Hoonah-Angoon Southeast Fairbanks Valdez-Cordova Wade Hampton Wrangell-Petersburg Yakutat City and Borough Yukon-Koyukuk Apache County Cochise County Coconino County Gila County Graham County Greenlee County La Paz County Maricopa County Mohave County Navajo County Pima County Pinal County Santa Cruz County Yavapai County Yuma County Arkansas County Ashley County Baxter County Benton County Boone County Bradley County Calhoun County Carroll County Chicot County Clark County Clay County Cleburne County Cleveland County Columbia County Conway County Craighead County Crawford County Crittenden County Cross County Dallas County Desha County Drew County Faulkner County Franklin County Fulton County Garland County Grant County Greene County Hempstead County Hot Spring County Howard County Independence County Izard County Jackson County Jefferson County Johnson County Lafayette County Lawrence County Lee County Lincoln County Little River County Logan County Lonoke County Madison County Marion County Miller County Mississippi County Monroe County Montgomery County Nevada County Newton County Ouachita County Perry County Phillips County Pike County Poinsett County Polk County Pope County Prairie County Pulaski County 66.8 55.6 57.1 58.3 63.6 61.5 62.1 56.7 59.8 65.1 35.6 31.8 35.8 33.7 32.9 33.1 33.9 33.5 35.3 35.4 32.2 33.0 31.5 34.7 32.7 34.4 33.2 36.3 36.4 36.3 33.5 33.6 36.4 33.3 34.1 36.4 35.5 33.9 33.2 35.2 35.8 35.5 35.2 35.3 33.9 33.8 33.6 35.1 35.5 36.4 34.5 34.3 36.1 33.7 34.3 34.1 35.8 36.1 35.6 34.2 35.5 33.3 36.1 34.8 34.0 33.7 35.2 34.8 36.0 36.3 33.4 35.8 34.7 34.6 33.7 36.0 33.6 35.0 34.5 34.2 35.6 34.5 35.3 34.8 34.8 199.4 227.4 224.7 224.5 216.1 214.7 196.3 226.9 219.7 208.1 250.6 250.1 248.5 249.0 250.2 250.7 246.0 247.9 245.9 249.7 248.9 248.5 249.1 247.6 245.6 268.6 268.2 267.6 265.8 266.9 267.9 267.5 266.4 268.7 266.8 269.6 267.9 267.8 266.8 267.3 269.4 265.7 269.7 269.2 267.4 268.6 268.3 267.6 266.1 268.3 266.9 267.5 269.5 266.4 267.1 266.0 268.4 268.1 268.8 268.0 266.5 266.4 268.9 269.2 268.3 265.8 266.2 268.1 266.3 267.3 266.0 270.0 268.8 266.4 266.7 266.8 267.1 267.1 269.2 266.3 269.4 265.7 266.9 268.5 267.7 AR Randolph County 36.3 269.0 AR St. Francis County 35.0 269.3 AR Saline County 34.6 267.4 AR Scott County 34.9 265.9 AR Searcy County 35.9 267.3 AR Sebastian County 35.3 265.6 AR Sevier County 34.0 265.7 AR Sharp County 36.2 268.5 AR Stone County 35.9 267.8 AR Union County 33.2 267.4 AR Van Buren County 35.6 267.6 AR Washington County 36.1 265.8 AR White County 35.3 268.3 AR Woodruff County 35.2 268.8 AR Yell County 35.0 266.6 CA Alameda County 37.7 237.9 CA Alpine County 38.6 240.1 CA Amador County 38.4 239.3 CA Butte County 39.6 238.4 CA Calaveras County 38.2 239.4 CA Colusa County 39.2 237.8 CA Contra Costa County 37.9 237.9 CA Del Norte County 41.7 235.9 CA El Dorado County 38.8 239.4 CA Fresno County 36.6 240.1 CA Glenn County 39.6 237.7 CA Humboldt County 40.7 236.0 CA Imperial County 33.0 244.5 CA Inyo County 36.7 242.3 CA Kern County 35.3 241.3 CA Kings County 36.2 240.2 CA Lake County 39.0 237.2 CA Lassen County 40.6 239.3 CA Los Angeles County 34.1 241.8 CA Madera County 37.0 240.0 CA Marin County 38.0 237.4 CA Mariposa County 37.6 240.0 CA Mendocino County 39.4 236.6 CA Merced County 37.2 239.3 CA Modoc County 41.5 239.2 CA Mono County 37.9 241.0 CA Monterey County 36.5 238.5 CA Napa County 38.4 237.7 CA Nevada County 39.3 239.2 CA Orange County 33.7 242.1 CA Placer County 39.0 239.1 CA Plumas County 40.0 239.1 CA Riverside County 33.8 243.2 CA Sacramento County 38.6 238.6 CA San Benito County 36.7 238.7 CA San Bernardino County 34.4 243.0 CA San Diego County 32.9 242.9 CA San Francisco County 37.8 237.6 CA San Joaquin County 37.9 238.7 CA San Luis Obispo County 35.4 239.4 CA San Mateo County 37.5 237.7 CA Santa Barbara County 34.6 239.9 CA Santa Clara County 37.3 238.1 CA Santa Cruz County 37.0 238.0 CA Shasta County 40.7 237.9 CA Sierra County 39.6 239.5 CA Siskiyou County 41.6 237.5 CA Solano County 38.2 237.9 CA Sonoma County 38.4 237.2 CA Stanislaus County 37.6 239.0 CA Sutter County 39.1 238.3 CA Tehama County 40.1 237.9 CA Trinity County 40.7 236.9 CA Tulare County 36.2 240.8 CA Tuolumne County 38.0 239.8 CA Ventura County 34.3 241.0 CA Yolo County 38.6 238.2 CA Yuba County 39.2 238.6 CO Adams County 39.9 255.1 CO Alamosa County 37.5 254.2 CO Arapahoe County 39.6 255.2 CO Archuleta County 37.2 252.9 CO Baca County 37.3 257.5 CO Bent County 38.1 256.9 CO Boulder County 40.1 254.8 CO Chaffee County 38.7 253.9 CO Cheyenne County 38.8 257.5 CO Clear Creek County 39.7 254.4 CO Conejos County 37.2 253.9 CO Costilla County 37.3 254.5 CO Crowley County 38.2 256.2 CO Custer County 38.1 254.6 CO Delta County 38.8 252.1 CO Denver County 39.7 255.0 CO Dolores County 37.8 251.4 Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CT CT CT CT CT CT CT CT DE DE DE DC FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL FL 28 Douglas County Eagle County Elbert County El Paso County Fremont County Garfield County Gilpin County Grand County Gunnison County Hinsdale County Huerfano County Jackson County Jefferson County Kiowa County Kit Carson County Lake County La Plata County Larimer County Las Animas County Lincoln County Logan County Mesa County Mineral County Moffat County Montezuma County Montrose County Morgan County Otero County Ouray County Park County Phillips County Pitkin County Prowers County Pueblo County Rio Blanco County Rio Grande County Routt County Saguache County San Juan County San Miguel County Sedgwick County Summit County Teller County Washington County Weld County Yuma County Fairfield County Hartford County Litchfield County Middlesex County New Haven County New London County Tolland County Windham County Kent County New Castle County Sussex County District of Columbia Alachua County Baker County Bay County Bradford County Brevard County Broward County Calhoun County Charlotte County Citrus County Clay County Collier County Columbia County DeSoto County Dixie County Duval County Escambia County Flagler County Franklin County Gadsden County Gilchrist County Glades County Gulf County Hamilton County Hardee County Hendry County Hernando County Highlands County Hillsborough County Holmes County Indian River County Jackson County Jefferson County 39.5 39.6 39.3 38.9 38.4 39.5 39.8 40.1 38.6 37.8 37.6 40.6 39.7 38.4 39.3 39.2 37.3 40.5 37.2 39.1 40.7 39.1 37.7 40.6 37.4 38.4 40.3 38.0 38.1 39.2 40.6 39.2 38.1 38.2 40.0 37.6 40.5 38.1 37.8 38.0 40.9 39.6 38.9 40.1 40.3 40.0 41.2 41.8 41.8 41.4 41.4 41.4 41.9 41.8 39.1 39.7 38.7 38.9 29.7 30.3 30.2 29.9 28.2 26.1 30.4 27.0 28.9 30.0 26.2 30.2 27.2 29.6 30.3 30.5 29.5 29.8 30.6 29.7 26.9 29.9 30.5 27.5 26.7 28.5 27.4 28.0 30.9 27.7 30.8 30.5 255.1 253.3 255.7 255.3 254.7 252.3 254.5 253.9 253.0 252.7 255.0 253.7 254.9 257.4 257.5 253.7 252.2 254.8 255.6 256.4 256.9 251.5 253.1 251.9 251.4 251.8 256.2 256.3 252.2 254.3 257.6 253.1 257.6 255.4 251.7 253.7 253.1 253.8 252.3 251.6 257.7 253.9 254.8 256.9 255.3 257.5 286.6 287.3 286.8 287.5 287.1 287.9 287.6 288.0 284.4 284.4 284.7 283.0 277.6 277.8 274.4 277.9 279.3 279.8 274.8 277.9 277.5 278.2 278.3 277.4 278.1 276.9 278.4 272.7 278.8 275.2 275.4 277.2 278.8 274.7 277.1 278.2 278.8 277.5 278.6 277.6 274.2 279.5 41 274.8 276.1 FL Lafayette County 30.0 276.8 FL Lake County 28.8 278.3 FL Lee County 26.6 278.2 FL Leon County 30.5 275.7 FL Levy County 29.3 277.3 FL Liberty County 30.3 275.1 FL Madison County 30.4 276.6 FL Manatee County 27.5 277.5 FL Marion County 29.1 277.9 FL Martin County 27.1 279.7 FL Miami-Dade County 25.8 279.7 FL Monroe County 24.8 278.8 FL Nassau County 30.6 278.3 FL Okaloosa County 30.6 273.4 FL Okeechobee County 27.3 279.1 FL Orange County 28.5 278.6 FL Osceola County 28.2 278.7 FL Palm Beach County 26.6 279.8 FL Pasco County 28.3 277.5 FL Pinellas County 27.9 277.3 FL Polk County 28.0 278.2 FL Putnam County 29.6 278.2 FL St. Johns County 29.9 278.6 FL St. Lucie County 27.3 279.6 FL Santa Rosa County 30.6 273.0 FL Sarasota County 27.2 277.6 FL Seminole County 28.7 278.7 FL Sumter County 28.8 277.9 FL Suwannee County 30.2 277.0 FL Taylor County 30.1 276.4 FL Union County 30.0 277.6 FL Volusia County 29.0 278.9 FL Wakulla County 30.1 275.6 FL Walton County 30.6 273.8 FL Washington County 30.6 274.4 GA Appling County 31.7 277.7 GA Atkinson County 31.3 277.1 GA Bacon County 31.6 277.5 GA Baker County 31.3 275.6 GA Baldwin County 33.1 276.8 GA Banks County 34.3 276.5 GA Barrow County 34.0 276.3 GA Bartow County 34.2 275.2 GA Ben Hill County 31.7 276.7 GA Berrien County 31.2 276.8 GA Bibb County 32.8 276.3 GA Bleckley County 32.4 276.7 GA Brantley County 31.2 278.0 GA Brooks County 30.9 276.4 GA Bryan County 32.1 278.6 GA Bulloch County 32.4 278.2 GA Burke County 33.1 278.0 GA Butts County 33.3 276.0 GA Calhoun County 31.5 275.3 GA Camden County 30.9 278.3 GA Candler County 32.4 277.9 GA Carroll County 33.6 274.9 GA Catoosa County 34.9 274.8 GA Charlton County 30.8 277.9 GA Chatham County 32.0 278.9 GA Chattahoochee County 32.3 275.2 GA Chattooga County 34.5 274.6 GA Cherokee County 34.2 275.5 GA Clarke County 34.0 276.6 GA Clay County 31.6 275.0 GA Clayton County 33.6 275.6 GA Clinch County 30.9 277.3 GA Cobb County 33.9 275.4 GA Coffee County 31.5 277.2 GA Colquitt County 31.2 276.2 GA Columbia County 33.5 277.8 GA Cook County 31.2 276.6 GA Coweta County 33.4 275.2 GA Crawford County 32.7 276.0 GA Crisp County 31.9 276.2 GA Dade County 34.9 274.5 GA Dawson County 34.4 275.9 GA Decatur County 30.9 275.4 GA DeKalb County 33.8 275.7 GA Dodge County 32.2 276.8 GA Dooly County 32.2 276.2 GA Dougherty County 31.6 275.8 GA Douglas County 33.7 275.3 GA Early County 31.3 275.1 GA Echols County 30.7 277.1 GA Effingham County 32.3 278.7 GA Elbert County 34.1 277.1 GA Emanuel County 32.6 277.7 42 Evans County GA 32.2 278.1 GA Fannin County 34.9 275.7 Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA GA 29 Fayette County Floyd County Forsyth County Franklin County Fulton County Gilmer County Glascock County Glynn County Gordon County Grady County Greene County Gwinnett County Habersham County Hall County Hancock County Haralson County Harris County Hart County Heard County Henry County Houston County Irwin County Jackson County Jasper County Jeff Davis County Jefferson County Jenkins County Johnson County Jones County Lamar County Lanier County Laurens County Lee County Liberty County Lincoln County Long County Lowndes County Lumpkin County McDuffie County McIntosh County Macon County Madison County Marion County Meriwether County Miller County Mitchell County Monroe County Montgomery County Morgan County Murray County Muscogee County Newton County Oconee County Oglethorpe County Paulding County Peach County Pickens County Pierce County Pike County Polk County Pulaski County Putnam County Quitman County Rabun County Randolph County Richmond County Rockdale County Schley County Screven County Seminole County Spalding County Stephens County Stewart County Sumter County Talbot County Taliaferro County Tattnall County Taylor County Telfair County Terrell County Thomas County Tift County Toombs County Towns County Treutlen County Troup County Turner County Twiggs County Union County Upson County 33.4 34.3 34.2 34.4 33.8 34.7 33.2 31.2 34.5 30.9 33.6 34.0 34.6 34.3 33.3 33.8 32.7 34.4 33.3 33.5 32.6 31.6 34.1 33.3 31.8 33.1 32.8 32.7 33.0 33.1 31.0 32.5 31.7 31.8 33.8 31.8 30.8 34.5 33.5 31.5 32.4 34.1 32.4 33.0 31.2 31.2 33.0 32.2 33.6 34.8 32.5 33.6 33.9 33.9 33.9 32.6 34.5 31.3 33.1 34.0 32.2 33.3 31.9 34.9 31.8 33.4 33.7 32.2 32.7 31.0 33.3 34.6 32.1 32.1 32.7 33.6 32.0 32.5 32.0 31.8 30.9 31.5 32.2 34.9 32.4 33.0 31.7 32.7 34.9 32.9 275.5 274.8 275.9 276.8 275.6 275.5 277.4 278.5 275.1 275.8 276.8 275.9 276.5 276.2 277.0 274.8 275.1 277.0 274.9 275.8 276.3 276.7 276.4 276.3 277.4 277.6 278.0 277.3 276.5 275.8 276.9 277.1 275.8 278.5 277.5 278.2 276.7 276.0 277.5 278.6 276.0 276.8 275.5 275.3 275.3 275.8 276.1 277.5 276.5 275.2 275.1 276.1 276.6 276.9 275.2 276.2 275.6 277.8 275.6 274.8 276.5 276.6 275.0 276.6 275.3 278.0 276.0 275.7 278.4 275.1 275.7 276.7 275.2 275.8 275.5 277.1 278.0 275.8 277.1 275.6 276.1 276.5 277.6 276.2 277.4 275.0 276.4 276.6 276.0 275.7 GA Walker County 34.8 274.7 GA Walton County 33.8 276.3 GA Ware County 31.2 277.6 GA Warren County 33.4 277.3 GA Washington County 32.9 277.2 GA Wayne County 31.6 278.1 GA Webster County 32.0 275.4 GA Wheeler County 32.1 277.3 GA White County 34.6 276.3 GA Whitfield County 34.8 275.0 GA Wilcox County 32.0 276.5 GA Wilkes County 33.8 277.3 GA Wilkinson County 32.8 276.8 GA Worth County 31.6 276.2 HI Hawaii County 19.7 204.6 HI Honolulu County 21.4 202.0 HI Kalawao County 21.2 203.0 HI Kauai County 22.0 200.5 HI Maui County 20.9 203.4 ID Ada County 43.6 243.7 ID Adams County 44.9 243.6 ID Bannock County 42.8 247.7 ID Bear Lake County 42.3 248.6 ID Benewah County 47.2 243.4 ID Bingham County 43.2 247.6 ID Blaine County 43.4 245.8 ID Boise County 44.0 244.1 ID Bonner County 48.3 243.3 ID Bonneville County 43.5 248.1 ID Boundary County 48.8 243.6 ID Butte County 43.7 246.8 ID Camas County 43.4 245.2 ID Canyon County 43.6 243.3 ID Caribou County 42.7 248.3 ID Cassia County 42.4 246.4 ID Clark County 44.2 247.7 ID Clearwater County 46.7 244.1 ID Custer County 44.2 245.9 ID Elmore County 43.1 244.5 ID Franklin County 42.2 248.1 ID Fremont County 44.2 248.5 ID Gem County 44.0 243.5 ID Gooding County 42.9 245.2 ID Idaho County 45.9 244.1 ID Jefferson County 43.8 247.9 ID Jerome County 42.7 245.7 ID Kootenai County 47.7 243.2 ID Latah County 46.8 243.2 ID Lemhi County 44.9 246.2 ID Lewis County 46.2 243.6 ID Lincoln County 43.0 245.8 ID Madison County 43.8 248.3 ID Minidoka County 42.7 246.3 ID Nez Perce County 46.4 243.1 ID Oneida County 42.2 247.6 ID Owyhee County 42.8 243.8 ID Payette County 44 243.1 ID Power County 42.8 247.2 ID Shoshone County 47.4 244.0 ID Teton County 43.7 248.9 ID Twin Falls County 42.5 245.4 ID Valley County 44.7 244.1 ID Washington County 44.4 243.1 IL Adams County 40.0 268.7 IL Alexander County 37.1 270.7 IL Bond County 38.9 270.6 IL Boone County 42.3 271.2 IL Brown County 40.0 269.3 IL Bureau County 41.4 270.5 IL Calhoun County 39.2 269.3 IL Carroll County 42.1 270.0 IL Cass County 40.0 269.7 IL Champaign County 40.1 271.8 IL Christian County 39.5 270.7 IL Clark County 39.3 272.2 IL Clay County 38.7 271.5 IL Clinton County 38.6 270.6 IL Coles County 39.5 271.7 IL Cook County 41.8 272.2 IL Crawford County 39.0 272.2 IL Cumberland County 39.3 271.7 IL DeKalb County 41.9 271.3 IL De Witt County 40.2 271.1 IL Douglas County 39.8 271.8 IL DuPage County 41.9 271.9 IL Edgar County 39.7 272.3 IL Edwards County 38.4 272.0 IL Effingham County 39.1 271.4 IL Fayette County 39.0 271.0 IL Ford County 40.6 271.8 Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IL IN IN IN IN IN IN IN IN IN IN IN IN IN IN IN 30 Franklin County Fulton County Gallatin County Greene County Grundy County Hamilton County Hancock County Hardin County Henderson County Henry County Iroquois County Jackson County Jasper County Jefferson County Jersey County Jo Daviess County Johnson County Kane County Kankakee County Kendall County Knox County Lake County La Salle County Lawrence County Lee County Livingston County Logan County McDonough County McHenry County McLean County Macon County Macoupin County Madison County Marion County Marshall County Mason County Massac County Menard County Mercer County Monroe County Montgomery County Morgan County Moultrie County Ogle County Peoria County Perry County Piatt County Pike County Pope County Pulaski County Putnam County Randolph County Richland County Rock Island County St. Clair County Saline County Sangamon County Schuyler County Scott County Shelby County Stark County Stephenson County Tazewell County Union County Vermilion County Wabash County Warren County Washington County Wayne County White County Whiteside County Will County Williamson County Winnebago County Woodford County Adams County Allen County Bartholomew County Benton County Blackford County Boone County Brown County Carroll County Cass County Clark County Clay County Clinton County Crawford County Daviess County Dearborn County 38.0 40.5 37.8 39.4 41.3 38.1 40.4 37.5 40.8 41.4 40.7 37.8 39.0 38.3 39.1 42.4 37.5 41.9 41.1 41.6 40.9 42.3 41.3 38.7 41.8 40.9 40.1 40.5 42.3 40.5 39.9 39.2 38.8 38.6 41.0 40.3 37.2 40.0 41.2 38.3 39.2 39.7 39.6 42.0 40.8 38.1 40.0 39.6 37.4 37.2 41.2 38.1 38.7 41.5 38.5 37.8 39.8 40.1 39.6 39.4 41.1 42.3 40.6 37.5 40.2 38.4 40.9 38.4 38.4 38.1 41.8 41.5 37.7 42.3 40.8 40.7 41.1 39.2 40.6 40.5 40.0 39.2 40.6 40.7 38.4 39.4 40.3 38.3 38.7 39.1 271.0 269.8 271.8 269.6 271.6 271.5 268.8 271.7 269.1 269.9 272.2 270.7 271.9 271.1 269.7 269.8 271.1 271.7 272.2 271.6 269.7 272 271.1 272.3 270.6 271.4 270.6 269.3 271.6 271.1 271.0 270.1 270.0 271.0 270.7 270.1 271.3 270.2 269.3 269.8 270.5 269.8 271.4 270.7 270.3 270.7 271.4 269.1 271.4 270.9 270.7 270.2 271.9 269.5 270 271.5 270.4 269.4 269.5 271.2 270.2 270.4 270.5 270.8 272.3 272.2 269.4 270.6 271.6 271.8 270.1 272.0 271.0 270.9 270.8 275.1 274.9 274.1 272.7 274.7 273.5 273.8 273.4 273.7 274.3 272.9 273.5 273.6 43 272.9 275.1 IN Decatur County 39.3 274.5 IN DeKalb County 41.4 275.0 IN Delaware County 40.2 274.6 IN Dubois County 38.4 273.1 IN Elkhart County 41.6 274.1 IN Fayette County 39.6 274.8 IN Floyd County 38.3 274.1 IN Fountain County 40.1 272.7 IN Franklin County 39.4 274.9 IN Fulton County 41.1 273.8 IN Gibson County 38.3 272.4 IN Grant County 40.5 274.4 IN Greene County 39.1 273.0 IN Hamilton County 40.0 273.9 IN Hancock County 39.8 274.2 IN Harrison County 38.2 273.9 IN Hendricks County 39.8 273.5 IN Henry County 39.9 274.6 IN Howard County 40.5 273.9 IN Huntington County 40.8 274.5 IN Jackson County 38.9 274.0 IN Jasper County 41.0 272.9 IN Jay County 40.4 275.0 IN Jefferson County 38.8 274.6 IN Jennings County 39.0 274.4 IN Johnson County 39.5 273.9 IN Knox County 38.7 272.6 IN Kosciusko County 41.3 274.2 IN LaGrange County 41.6 274.6 IN Lake County 41.5 272.6 IN LaPorte County 41.6 273.2 IN Lawrence County 38.8 273.5 IN Madison County 40.1 274.3 IN Marion County 39.8 273.9 IN Marshall County 41.3 273.7 IN Martin County 38.7 273.2 IN Miami County 40.8 273.9 IN Monroe County 39.2 273.5 IN Montgomery County 40.0 273.1 IN Morgan County 39.5 273.6 IN Newton County 41.0 272.6 IN Noble County 41.4 274.6 IN Ohio County 38.9 275.1 IN Orange County 38.6 273.5 IN Owen County 39.3 273.2 IN Parke County 39.8 272.8 IN Perry County 38.0 273.3 IN Pike County 38.4 272.8 IN Porter County 41.5 272.9 IN Posey County 38.0 272.2 IN Pulaski County 41.0 273.3 IN Putnam County 39.7 273.2 IN Randolph County 40.2 275 IN Ripley County 39.2 274.8 IN Rush County 39.6 274.5 IN St. Joseph County 41.7 273.8 IN Scott County 38.7 274.2 IN Shelby County 39.5 274.2 IN Spencer County 38.0 273.0 IN Starke County 41.3 273.3 IN Steuben County 41.7 275.0 IN Sullivan County 39.1 272.6 IN Switzerland County 38.8 275.0 IN Tippecanoe County 40.4 273.1 IN Tipton County 40.3 274.0 IN Union County 39.6 275.1 IN Vanderburgh County 38.0 272.4 IN Vermillion County 39.8 272.6 IN Vigo County 39.5 272.6 IN Wabash County 40.9 274.2 IN Warren County 40.3 272.6 IN Warrick County 38.0 272.7 IN Washington County 38.6 273.9 IN Wayne County 39.8 275.0 IN Wells County 40.7 274.8 IN White County 40.7 273.2 IN Whitley County 41.2 274.5 IA Adair County 41.3 265.5 IA Adams County 41.0 265.3 IA Allamakee County 43.3 268.6 IA Appanoose County 40.8 267.1 IA Audubon County 41.7 265.1 IA Benton County 42.1 267.9 IA Black Hawk County 42.5 267.7 IA Boone County 42.0 266.1 IA Bremer County 42.8 267.7 IA Buchanan County 42.5 268.1 IA Buena Vista County 42.7 264.8 44Butler County IA 42.7 267.2 IA Calhoun County 42.4 265.4 Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA IA KS KS KS KS 31 Carroll County Cass County Cedar County Cerro Gordo County Cherokee County Chickasaw County Clarke County Clay County Clayton County Clinton County Crawford County Dallas County Davis County Decatur County Delaware County Des Moines County Dickinson County Dubuque County Emmet County Fayette County Floyd County Franklin County Fremont County Greene County Grundy County Guthrie County Hamilton County Hancock County Hardin County Harrison County Henry County Howard County Humboldt County Ida County Iowa County Jackson County Jasper County Jefferson County Johnson County Jones County Keokuk County Kossuth County Lee County Linn County Louisa County Lucas County Lyon County Madison County Mahaska County Marion County Marshall County Mills County Mitchell County Monona County Monroe County Montgomery County Muscatine County O’Brien County Osceola County Page County Palo Alto County Plymouth County Pocahontas County Polk County Pottawattamie County Poweshiek County Ringgold County Sac County Scott County Shelby County Sioux County Story County Tama County Taylor County Union County Van Buren County Wapello County Warren County Washington County Wayne County Webster County Winnebago County Winneshiek County Woodbury County Worth County Wright County Allen County Anderson County Atchison County Barber County 42.0 41.4 41.8 43.1 42.7 43.1 41.0 43.1 42.9 41.9 42.0 41.7 40.7 40.7 42.5 40.9 43.4 42.5 43.4 42.8 43.1 42.7 40.7 42.0 42.4 41.7 42.4 43.1 42.4 41.7 41.0 43.4 42.8 42.4 41.7 42.2 41.7 41.0 41.7 42.1 41.3 43.2 40.6 42.0 41.2 41.0 43.4 41.3 41.3 41.3 42.0 41.0 43.3 42.1 41.0 41.0 41.5 43.1 43.4 40.7 43.1 42.8 42.7 41.6 41.3 41.7 40.7 42.4 41.6 41.7 43.1 42.0 42.1 40.7 41.0 40.7 41.0 41.4 41.3 40.7 42.4 43.4 43.3 42.4 43.4 42.7 37.9 38.2 39.5 37.2 265.1 265.0 268.9 266.7 264.4 267.7 266.2 264.8 268.7 269.6 264.6 266.0 267.6 266.2 268.6 268.8 264.9 269.2 265.3 268.1 267.2 266.8 264.4 265.6 267.2 265.5 266.3 266.3 266.8 264.2 268.5 267.7 265.8 264.5 267.9 269.4 266.9 268.0 268.4 268.8 267.8 265.8 268.6 268.4 268.7 266.7 263.8 266.0 267.4 266.9 267.0 264.4 267.2 264.0 267.2 264.8 268.9 264.4 264.4 264.8 265.3 263.8 265.3 266.4 264.3 267.5 265.8 264.9 269.4 264.7 263.8 266.5 267.5 265.3 265.7 268.1 267.6 266.4 268.3 266.7 265.8 266.3 268.2 263.8 266.7 266.2 264.7 264.7 264.7 261.4 KS Barton County 38.4 261.2 KS Bourbon County 37.9 265.2 KS Brown County 39.8 264.4 KS Butler County 37.8 263.1 KS Chase County 38.3 263.4 KS Chautauqua County 37.1 263.7 KS Cherokee County 37.1 265.2 KS Cheyenne County 39.8 258.3 KS Clark County 37.2 260.2 KS Clay County 39.4 262.9 KS Cloud County 39.5 262.3 KS Coffey County 38.2 264.3 KS Comanche County 37.3 260.7 KS Cowley County 37.2 263.1 KS Crawford County 37.5 265.2 KS Decatur County 39.8 259.6 KS Dickinson County 38.8 262.9 KS Doniphan County 39.8 264.9 KS Douglas County 38.9 264.7 KS Edwards County 37.9 260.7 KS Elk County 37.4 263.8 KS Ellis County 38.9 260.7 KS Ellsworth County 38.7 261.8 KS Finney County 38.0 259.2 KS Ford County 37.7 260.1 KS Franklin County 38.6 264.7 KS Geary County 39.0 263.2 KS Gove County 39.0 259.5 KS Graham County 39.3 260.1 KS Grant County 37.6 258.7 KS Gray County 37.7 259.6 KS Greeley County 38.5 258.2 KS Greenwood County 37.9 263.8 KS Hamilton County 38.0 258.2 KS Harper County 37.2 261.9 KS Harvey County 38.0 262.6 KS Haskell County 37.5 259.1 KS Hodgeman County 38.1 260.1 KS Jackson County 39.4 264.2 KS Jefferson County 39.2 264.6 KS Jewell County 39.8 261.8 KS Johnson County 38.9 265.2 KS Kearny County 38.0 258.7 KS Kingman County 37.6 261.9 KS Kiowa County 37.6 260.7 KS Labette County 37.2 264.7 KS Lane County 38.5 259.5 KS Leavenworth County 39.2 265.0 KS Lincoln County 39.0 261.8 KS Linn County 38.2 265.2 KS Logan County 39.0 258.9 KS Lyon County 38.4 263.9 KS McPherson County 38.4 262.4 KS Marion County 38.3 262.9 KS Marshall County 39.8 263.5 KS Meade County 37.3 259.6 KS Miami County 38.6 265.1 KS Mitchell County 39.4 261.8 KS Montgomery County 37.1 264.3 KS Morris County 38.7 263.4 KS Morton County 37.1 258.2 KS Nemaha County 39.8 264.0 KS Neosho County 37.6 264.6 KS Ness County 38.5 260.1 KS Norton County 39.8 260.1 KS Osage County 38.6 264.3 KS Osborne County 39.4 261.2 KS Ottawa County 39.1 262.3 KS Pawnee County 38.2 260.8 KS Phillips County 39.8 260.7 KS Pottawatomie County 39.3 263.7 KS Pratt County 37.6 261.3 KS Rawlins County 39.8 258.9 KS Reno County 38.0 262.0 KS Republic County 39.8 262.4 KS Rice County 38.3 261.8 KS Riley County 39.3 263.3 KS Rooks County 39.4 260.7 KS Rush County 38.5 260.7 KS Russell County 38.9 261.2 KS Saline County 38.8 262.4 KS Scott County 38.5 259.1 KS Sedgwick County 37.7 262.6 KS Seward County 37.1 259.1 KS Shawnee County 39.0 264.3 KS Sheridan County 39.4 259.5 KS Sherman County 39.3 258.3 KS Smith County 39.8 261.2 KS Stafford County 38.0 261.3 KS Stanton County 37.6 258.3 Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. KS KS KS KS KS KS KS KS KS KS KS KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY KY 32 Stevens County Sumner County Thomas County Trego County Wabaunsee County Wallace County Washington County Wichita County Wilson County Woodson County Wyandotte County Adair County Allen County Anderson County Ballard County Barren County Bath County Bell County Boone County Bourbon County Boyd County Boyle County Bracken County Breathitt County Breckinridge County Bullitt County Butler County Caldwell County Calloway County Campbell County Carlisle County Carroll County Carter County Casey County Christian County Clark County Clay County Clinton County Crittenden County Cumberland County Daviess County Edmonson County Elliott County Estill County Fayette County Fleming County Floyd County Franklin County Fulton County Gallatin County Garrard County Grant County Graves County Grayson County Green County Greenup County Hancock County Hardin County Harlan County Harrison County Hart County Henderson County Henry County Hickman County Hopkins County Jackson County Jefferson County Jessamine County Johnson County Kenton County Knott County Knox County Larue County Laurel County Lawrence County Lee County Leslie County Letcher County Lewis County Lincoln County Livingston County Logan County Lyon County McCracken County McCreary County McLean County Madison County Magoffin County Marion County Marshall County 37.2 37.3 39.4 38.9 39.0 38.9 39.8 38.5 37.5 37.9 39.1 37.1 36.7 38.0 37.1 37.0 38.1 36.7 39.0 38.2 38.4 37.6 38.7 37.5 37.8 38.0 37.2 37.2 36.6 39.0 36.9 38.7 38.3 37.3 36.9 38.0 37.2 36.7 37.3 36.8 37.8 37.2 38.1 37.7 38.0 38.4 37.6 38.2 36.5 38.7 37.6 38.7 36.7 37.5 37.3 38.6 37.9 37.7 36.9 38.4 37.3 37.8 38.4 36.7 37.3 37.4 38.2 37.9 37.8 39.0 37.3 36.9 37.5 37.1 38.1 37.6 37.1 37.1 38.5 37.5 37.2 36.9 37.0 37.1 36.7 37.5 37.7 37.7 37.6 36.9 258.7 262.6 259.0 260.2 263.8 258.2 262.9 258.6 264.2 264.3 265.3 274.7 273.8 275.0 271.0 274.1 276.2 276.3 275.3 275.8 277.3 275.2 275.9 276.7 273.5 274.3 273.3 272.1 271.7 275.6 271.0 274.9 277.0 275.1 272.5 275.8 276.3 274.9 271.9 274.6 272.9 273.8 276.9 276.0 275.5 276.3 277.3 275.1 270.9 275.1 275.4 275.4 271.4 273.7 274.5 277.1 273.2 274.1 276.8 275.7 274.1 272.4 274.8 271.0 272.5 276.0 274.3 275.4 277.2 275.5 277.0 276.1 274.3 275.9 277.3 276.3 276.6 277.2 276.7 275.3 271.7 273.1 271.9 271.3 275.5 272.8 275.7 276.9 45 274.7 271.7 KY Martin County 37.8 277.5 KY Mason County 38.6 276.2 KY Meade County 37.9 273.9 KY Menifee County 38.0 276.4 KY Mercer County 37.8 275.2 KY Metcalfe County 37.0 274.4 KY Monroe County 36.7 274.3 KY Montgomery County 38.0 276.1 KY Morgan County 37.9 276.7 KY Muhlenberg County 37.2 272.9 KY Nelson County 37.8 274.5 KY Nicholas County 38.3 276.0 KY Ohio County 37.5 273.1 KY Oldham County 38.4 274.6 KY Owen County 38.5 275.2 KY Owsley County 37.4 276.3 KY Pendleton County 38.7 275.6 KY Perry County 37.2 276.8 KY Pike County 37.4 277.6 KY Powell County 37.8 276.1 KY Pulaski County 37.1 275.4 KY Robertson County 38.5 275.9 KY Rockcastle County 37.4 275.7 KY Rowan County 38.2 276.6 KY Russell County 37.0 274.9 KY Scott County 38.2 275.4 KY Shelby County 38.2 274.8 KY Simpson County 36.7 273.4 KY Spencer County 38.0 274.7 KY Taylor County 37.4 274.7 KY Todd County 36.8 272.8 KY Trigg County 36.8 272.1 KY Trimble County 38.6 274.6 KY Union County 37.6 272.1 KY Warren County 37.0 273.6 KY Washington County 37.7 274.8 KY Wayne County 36.8 275.2 KY Webster County 37.5 272.3 KY Whitley County 36.8 275.9 KY Wolfe County 37.7 276.5 KY Woodford County 38.1 275.3 LA Acadia Parish 30.3 267.6 LA Allen Parish 30.7 267.2 LA Ascension Parish 30.2 269.1 LA Assumption Parish 29.9 268.9 LA Avoyelles Parish 31.1 267.9 LA Beauregard Parish 30.7 266.7 LA Bienville Parish 32.4 267.0 LA Bossier Parish 32.6 266.3 LA Caddo Parish 32.5 266.2 LA Calcasieu Parish 30.2 266.7 LA Caldwell Parish 32.1 267.9 LA Cameron Parish 29.9 266.8 LA Catahoula Parish 31.7 268.1 LA Claiborne Parish 32.8 267.0 LA Concordia Parish 31.6 268.5 LA De Soto Parish 32.1 266.2 LA East Baton Rouge Parish 30.5 268.9 LA East Carroll Parish 32.8 268.8 LA East Feliciana Parish 30.8 268.9 LA Evangeline Parish 30.7 267.6 LA Franklin Parish 32.1 268.3 LA Grant Parish 31.6 267.4 LA Iberia Parish 30.0 268.2 LA Iberville Parish 30.3 268.7 LA Jackson Parish 32.3 267.4 LA Jefferson Parish 29.9 269.8 LA Jefferson Davis Parish 30.2 267.2 LA Lafayette Parish 30.2 268.0 LA Lafourche Parish 29.6 269.4 LA La Salle Parish 31.7 267.8 LA Lincoln Parish 32.6 267.3 LA Livingston Parish 30.5 269.2 LA Madison Parish 32.4 268.8 LA Morehouse Parish 32.8 268.1 LA Natchitoches Parish 31.7 266.9 LA Orleans Parish 30.0 269.9 LA Ouachita Parish 32.5 267.9 LA Plaquemines Parish 29.6 270.2 LA Pointe Coupee Parish 30.6 268.5 LA Rapides Parish 31.3 267.5 LA Red River Parish 32.1 266.7 LA Richland Parish 32.4 268.3 LA Sabine Parish 31.6 266.4 LA St. Bernard Parish 29.9 270.1 LA St. Charles Parish 29.9 269.6 LA St. Helena Parish 30.8 269.3 LA St. James Parish 30.0 269.2 46St. John the Baptist Parish LA 30.1 269.5 LA St. Landry Parish 30.5 267.9 Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA LA ME ME ME ME ME ME ME ME ME ME ME ME ME ME ME ME MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MD MA MA MA MA MA MA MA MA MA MA MA MA MA MA MI MI MI MI MI MI MI MI MI MI MI MI MI MI MI MI MI MI MI MI MI 33 St. Martin Parish St. Mary Parish St. Tammany Parish Tangipahoa Parish Tensas Parish Terrebonne Parish Union Parish Vermilion Parish Vernon Parish Washington Parish Webster Parish West Baton Rouge Parish West Carroll Parish West Feliciana Parish Winn Parish Androscoggin County Aroostook County Cumberland County Franklin County Hancock County Kennebec County Knox County Lincoln County Oxford County Penobscot County Piscataquis County Sagadahoc County Somerset County Waldo County Washington County York County Allegany County Anne Arundel County Baltimore County Calvert County Caroline County Carroll County Cecil County Charles County Dorchester County Frederick County Garrett County Harford County Howard County Kent County Montgomery County Prince George’s County Queen Anne’s County St. Mary’s County Somerset County Talbot County Washington County Wicomico County Worcester County Baltimore city Barnstable County Berkshire County Bristol County Dukes County Essex County Franklin County Hampden County Hampshire County Middlesex County Nantucket County Norfolk County Plymouth County Suffolk County Worcester County Alcona County Alger County Allegan County Alpena County Antrim County Arenac County Baraga County Barry County Bay County Benzie County Berrien County Branch County Calhoun County Cass County Charlevoix County Cheboygan County Chippewa County Clare County Clinton County Crawford County Delta County 30.2 29.7 30.4 30.6 32.0 29.5 32.8 30.0 31.1 30.8 32.7 30.5 32.8 30.9 31.9 44.1 46.6 43.8 44.9 44.5 44.4 44.1 44.0 44.3 45.2 45.6 43.9 45.1 44.5 44.9 43.4 39.6 39.1 39.4 38.5 38.9 39.6 39.6 38.5 38.5 39.5 39.5 39.5 39.2 39.3 39.1 38.9 39.0 38.3 38.1 38.8 39.6 38.4 38.3 39.3 41.7 42.4 41.8 41.4 42.6 42.6 42.1 42.3 42.5 41.3 42.2 42.0 42.3 42.3 44.7 46.4 42.6 45.0 45.0 44.1 46.7 42.6 43.6 44.6 42.0 41.9 42.3 41.9 45.2 45.5 46.3 44.0 42.9 44.7 45.9 268.2 268.6 270.1 269.5 268.7 269.3 267.6 267.8 266.8 270.0 266.7 268.7 268.6 268.6 267.4 289.8 291.7 289.7 289.6 291.6 290.2 290.9 290.5 289.3 291.3 290.7 290.1 290.1 290.9 292.4 289.3 281.2 283.4 283.4 283.5 284.2 283.0 284.0 283.0 284.0 282.6 280.7 283.7 283.1 283.9 282.9 283.1 283.9 283.4 284.2 283.9 282.2 284.4 284.7 283.4 289.7 286.8 288.9 289.4 289.0 287.4 287.4 287.4 288.7 289.9 288.8 289.2 288.9 288.2 276.4 273.4 274.1 276.5 274.8 276.1 271.6 274.7 276.1 274.0 273.6 274.9 274.9 274.0 274.9 275.5 275.5 275.1 275.4 275.4 273.1 MI Dickinson County 45.9 272 MI Eaton County 42.6 275.2 MI Emmet County 45.5 275.1 MI Genesee County 43.0 276.3 MI Gladwin County 44.0 275.6 MI Gogebic County 46.4 270.2 MI Grand Traverse County 44.7 274.4 MI Gratiot County 43.3 275.4 MI Hillsdale County 41.9 275.4 MI Houghton County 47.0 271.4 MI Huron County 43.8 276.9 MI Ingham County 42.7 275.5 MI Ionia County 43.0 274.9 MI Iosco County 44.4 276.4 MI Iron County 46.2 271.4 MI Isabella County 43.6 275.2 MI Jackson County 42.2 275.6 MI Kalamazoo County 42.3 274.4 MI Kalkaska County 44.7 274.9 MI Kent County 43.0 274.4 MI Keweenaw County 47.4 271.8 MI Lake County 44.0 274.2 MI Lapeer County 43.1 276.8 MI Leelanau County 44.9 274.2 MI Lenawee County 41.9 275.9 MI Livingston County 42.6 276.1 MI Luce County 46.5 274.4 MI Mackinac County 46.0 275.0 MI Macomb County 42.6 277.0 MI Manistee County 44.3 273.9 MI Marquette County 46.5 272.4 MI Mason County 44.0 273.7 MI Mecosta County 43.6 274.6 MI Menominee County 45.5 272.4 MI Midland County 43.6 275.7 MI Missaukee County 44.3 274.9 MI Monroe County 41.9 276.5 MI Montcalm County 43.3 274.8 MI Montmorency County 45.0 275.9 MI Muskegon County 43.3 273.8 MI Newaygo County 43.5 274.2 MI Oakland County 42.6 276.7 MI Oceana County 43.6 273.7 MI Ogemaw County 44.3 275.9 MI Ontonagon County 46.7 270.7 MI Osceola County 44.0 274.7 MI Oscoda County 44.7 275.8 MI Otsego County 45.0 275.4 MI Ottawa County 42.9 274.0 MI Presque Isle County 45.4 276.1 MI Roscommon County 44.4 275.3 MI Saginaw County 43.4 276.0 MI St. Clair County 42.9 277.4 MI St. Joseph County 41.9 274.5 MI Sanilac County 43.4 277.2 MI Schoolcraft County 46.1 273.8 MI Shiawassee County 42.9 275.9 MI Tuscola County 43.5 276.6 MI Van Buren County 42.3 274.0 MI Washtenaw County 42.3 276.2 MI Wayne County 42.3 276.8 MI Wexford County 44.3 274.4 MN Aitkin County 46.6 266.5 MN Anoka County 45.2 266.7 MN Becker County 46.9 264.3 MN Beltrami County 47.7 265.2 MN Benton County 45.7 265.9 MN Big Stone County 45.4 263.6 MN Blue Earth County 44.1 266.0 MN Brown County 44.3 265.3 MN Carlton County 46.6 267.4 MN Carver County 44.8 266.3 MN Cass County 46.9 265.6 MN Chippewa County 45.0 264.4 MN Chisago County 45.5 267.1 MN Clay County 46.9 263.4 MN Clearwater County 47.5 264.6 MN Cook County 47.9 269.5 MN Cottonwood County 44.0 264.8 MN Crow Wing County 46.5 265.9 MN Dakota County 44.8 266.9 MN Dodge County 44.0 267.2 MN Douglas County 45.9 264.6 MN Faribault County 43.7 266.0 MN Fillmore County 43.7 267.9 MN Freeborn County 43.7 266.6 MN Goodhue County 44.4 267.3 MN Grant County 45.9 264.0 MN Hennepin County 45.0 266.6 MN Houston County 43.7 268.5 Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MN MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS MS 34 Hubbard County Isanti County Itasca County Jackson County Kanabec County Kandiyohi County Kittson County Koochiching County Lac qui Parle County Lake County Lake of the Woods County Le Sueur County Lincoln County Lyon County McLeod County Mahnomen County Marshall County Martin County Meeker County Mille Lacs County Morrison County Mower County Murray County Nicollet County Nobles County Norman County Olmsted County Otter Tail County Pennington County Pine County Pipestone County Polk County Pope County Ramsey County Red Lake County Redwood County Renville County Rice County Rock County Roseau County St. Louis County Scott County Sherburne County Sibley County Stearns County Steele County Stevens County Swift County Todd County Traverse County Wabasha County Wadena County Waseca County Washington County Watonwan County Wilkin County Winona County Wright County Yellow Medicine County Adams County Alcorn County Amite County Attala County Benton County Bolivar County Calhoun County Carroll County Chickasaw County Choctaw County Claiborne County Clarke County Clay County Coahoma County Copiah County Covington County DeSoto County Forrest County Franklin County George County Greene County Grenada County Hancock County Harrison County Hinds County Holmes County Humphreys County Issaquena County Itawamba County Jackson County Jasper County 47.1 45.6 47.4 43.7 45.9 45.2 48.8 48.4 45.0 47.5 48.7 44.4 44.4 44.4 44.8 47.3 48.3 43.7 45.1 45.9 46.0 43.7 44.0 44.3 43.7 47.3 44.0 46.4 48.1 46.1 44.0 47.8 45.6 45.0 47.9 44.4 44.7 44.3 43.7 48.8 47.4 44.7 45.4 44.6 45.5 44.0 45.6 45.3 46.1 45.8 44.3 46.5 44.0 45.0 44.0 46.3 44.0 45.2 44.7 31.5 34.9 31.2 33.1 34.8 33.8 33.9 33.5 33.9 33.3 32.0 32.1 33.6 34.2 31.9 31.6 34.9 31.3 31.5 30.9 31.2 33.8 30.4 30.4 32.3 33.1 33.1 32.8 34.3 30.5 32.0 265.1 266.7 266.4 264.9 266.7 265.0 263.1 266.3 263.8 268.5 265.2 266.3 263.7 264.2 265.7 264.2 263.5 265.5 265.5 266.4 265.7 267.2 264.3 265.9 264.3 263.5 267.6 264.3 263.9 267.2 263.7 263.6 264.6 266.9 263.9 264.8 265.1 266.7 263.8 264.2 267.6 266.5 266.2 265.8 265.5 266.8 264.0 264.3 265.1 263.5 267.8 265.0 266.4 267.1 265.4 263.5 268.3 266.1 264.2 268.6 271.5 269.2 270.4 270.8 269.2 270.7 270.1 271.1 270.7 269.1 271.3 271.3 269.4 269.6 270.5 270.0 270.7 269.1 271.4 271.4 270.2 270.5 270.9 269.7 269.9 269.5 269.0 271.6 47 271.4 270.9 MS Jefferson County 31.7 269.0 MS Jefferson Davis County 31.6 270.2 MS Jones County 31.7 270.8 MS Kemper County 32.8 271.3 MS Lafayette County 34.4 270.5 MS Lamar County 31.2 270.5 MS Lauderdale County 32.4 271.3 MS Lawrence County 31.6 269.9 MS Leake County 32.7 270.5 MS Lee County 34.3 271.3 MS Leflore County 33.6 269.7 MS Lincoln County 31.5 269.6 MS Lowndes County 33.5 271.6 MS Madison County 32.6 269.9 MS Marion County 31.2 270.2 MS Marshall County 34.8 270.5 MS Monroe County 33.9 271.5 MS Montgomery County 33.5 270.3 MS Neshoba County 32.7 270.9 MS Newton County 32.4 270.9 MS Noxubee County 33.1 271.4 MS Oktibbeha County 33.4 271.1 MS Panola County 34.4 270.0 MS Pearl River County 30.7 270.4 MS Perry County 31.2 271.0 MS Pike County 31.2 269.6 MS Pontotoc County 34.2 271.0 MS Prentiss County 34.6 271.5 MS Quitman County 34.3 269.7 MS Rankin County 32.3 270.0 MS Scott County 32.4 270.5 MS Sharkey County 32.9 269.2 MS Simpson County 31.9 270.1 MS Smith County 32.0 270.5 MS Stone County 30.8 270.9 MS Sunflower County 33.6 269.4 MS Tallahatchie County 33.9 269.8 MS Tate County 34.6 270.0 MS Tippah County 34.8 271.1 MS Tishomingo County 34.7 271.8 MS Tunica County 34.7 269.6 MS Union County 34.5 271.0 MS Walthall County 31.1 269.9 MS Warren County 32.3 269.1 MS Washington County 33.4 269.0 MS Wayne County 31.6 271.3 MS Webster County 33.6 270.8 MS Wilkinson County 31.2 268.7 MS Winston County 33.1 270.9 MS Yalobusha County 34.1 270.3 MS Yazoo County 32.8 269.6 MO Adair County 40.2 267.4 MO Andrew County 40.0 265.2 MO Atchison County 40.4 264.6 MO Audrain County 39.2 268.2 MO Barry County 36.7 266.2 MO Barton County 37.5 265.7 MO Bates County 38.2 265.6 MO Benton County 38.3 266.7 MO Bollinger County 37.3 270.0 MO Boone County 39.0 267.7 MO Buchanan County 39.7 265.2 MO Butler County 36.7 269.6 MO Caldwell County 39.7 266.0 MO Callaway County 38.8 268.1 MO Camden County 38.1 267.2 MO Cape Girardeau County 37.4 270.4 MO Carroll County 39.4 266.5 MO Carter County 36.9 269.1 MO Cass County 38.7 265.6 MO Cedar County 37.7 266.1 MO Chariton County 39.5 267.0 MO Christian County 37.0 266.8 MO Clark County 40.4 268.3 MO Clay County 39.3 265.5 MO Clinton County 39.6 265.6 MO Cole County 38.5 267.8 MO Cooper County 38.9 267.2 MO Crawford County 38.0 268.7 MO Dade County 37.4 266.2 MO Dallas County 37.7 267.0 MO Daviess County 40.0 266.0 MO DeKalb County 39.9 265.6 MO Dent County 37.6 268.5 MO Douglas County 36.9 267.5 MO Dunklin County 36.3 269.9 MO Franklin County 38.4 269.0 MO Gasconade County 38.4 268.5 48Gentry County MO 40.2 265.6 MO Greene County 37.2 266.7 Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MO MT MT MT MT MT MT MT MT MT MT MT MT MT MT 35 Grundy County Harrison County Henry County Hickory County Holt County Howard County Howell County Iron County Jackson County Jasper County Jefferson County Johnson County Knox County Laclede County Lafayette County Lawrence County Lewis County Lincoln County Linn County Livingston County McDonald County Macon County Madison County Maries County Marion County Mercer County Miller County Mississippi County Moniteau County Monroe County Montgomery County Morgan County New Madrid County Newton County Nodaway County Oregon County Osage County Ozark County Pemiscot County Perry County Pettis County Phelps County Pike County Platte County Polk County Pulaski County Putnam County Ralls County Randolph County Ray County Reynolds County Ripley County St. Charles County St. Clair County Ste. Genevieve County St. Francois County St. Louis County Saline County Schuyler County Scotland County Scott County Shannon County Shelby County Stoddard County Stone County Sullivan County Taney County Texas County Vernon County Warren County Washington County Wayne County Webster County Worth County Wright County St. Louis city Beaverhead County Big Horn County Blaine County Broadwater County Carbon County Carter County Cascade County Chouteau County Custer County Daniels County Dawson County Deer Lodge County Fallon County Fergus County 40.1 40.3 38.4 37.9 40.1 39.1 36.8 37.5 39.0 37.1 38.3 38.7 40.1 37.7 39.1 37.1 40.1 39.0 39.8 39.8 36.6 39.8 37.5 38.1 39.8 40.4 38.2 36.8 38.6 39.5 38.9 38.4 36.6 36.9 40.4 36.6 38.5 36.6 36.2 37.7 38.7 37.9 39.4 39.3 37.6 37.8 40.5 39.5 39.4 39.3 37.4 36.6 38.8 38.1 37.9 37.8 38.7 39.1 40.5 40.4 37.0 37.1 39.8 36.8 36.7 40.2 36.7 37.3 37.8 38.8 38.0 37.1 37.3 40.5 37.2 38.6 45.2 45.5 48.5 46.3 45.3 45.6 47.4 47.9 46.3 48.8 47.2 46.1 46.4 47.1 266.4 266.0 266.2 266.7 264.8 267.3 268.1 269.3 265.5 265.6 269.5 266.2 267.9 267.4 266.2 266.2 268.3 269.1 266.9 266.4 265.6 267.4 269.7 268.1 268.5 266.4 267.5 270.7 267.4 268.0 268.5 267.2 270.3 265.6 265.1 268.6 268.1 267.5 270.2 270.2 266.7 268.2 268.9 265.3 266.6 267.8 267.0 268.5 267.5 266.0 269.0 269.2 269.3 266.2 269.8 269.5 269.6 266.8 267.5 267.9 270.4 268.6 267.9 270.0 266.5 266.9 266.8 268.0 265.7 268.9 269.2 269.5 267.1 265.6 267.5 269.8 247.1 252.5 251.0 248.5 250.9 255.5 248.7 249.6 254.2 254.6 255.2 247.0 255.6 250.6 MT Flathead County 48.3 245.7 MT Gallatin County 45.7 248.8 MT Garfield County 47.2 253.0 MT Glacier County 48.6 247.2 MT Golden Valley County 46.4 250.9 MT Granite County 46.4 246.6 MT Hill County 48.6 250.0 MT Jefferson County 46.1 247.9 MT Judith Basin County 47.0 249.8 MT Lake County 47.7 245.9 MT Lewis and Clark County 46.8 247.8 MT Liberty County 48.6 249.0 MT Lincoln County 48.6 244.6 MT McCone County 47.6 254.3 MT Madison County 45.4 248.1 MT Meagher County 46.6 249.1 MT Mineral County 47.1 245.0 MT Missoula County 46.9 246.0 MT Musselshell County 46.6 251.6 MT Park County 45.7 249.5 MT Petroleum County 47.0 251.7 MT Phillips County 48.4 252.2 MT Pondera County 48.2 247.8 MT Powder River County 45.4 254.4 MT Powell County 46.6 247.2 MT Prairie County 46.9 254.6 MT Ravalli County 46.2 245.9 MT Richland County 47.8 255.5 MT Roosevelt County 48.2 255.0 MT Rosebud County 46.0 253.3 MT Sanders County 47.6 244.9 MT Sheridan County 48.7 255.5 MT Silver Bow County 46.0 247.4 MT Stillwater County 45.6 250.6 MT Sweet Grass County 45.9 250.1 MT Teton County 47.8 247.8 MT Toole County 48.6 248.2 MT Treasure County 46.3 252.7 MT Valley County 48.3 253.4 MT Wheatland County 46.4 250.1 MT Wibaux County 47.0 255.8 MT Yellowstone County 45.8 251.5 NE Adams County 40.6 261.5 NE Antelope County 42.2 261.9 NE Arthur County 41.6 258.3 NE Banner County 41.5 256.3 NE Blaine County 41.9 260.0 NE Boone County 41.7 262.0 NE Box Butte County 42.2 257.1 NE Boyd County 42.9 261.3 NE Brown County 42.5 260.1 NE Buffalo County 40.8 260.9 NE Burt County 41.9 263.7 NE Butler County 41.2 262.9 NE Cass County 40.9 263.9 NE Cedar County 42.6 262.8 NE Chase County 40.5 258.3 NE Cherry County 42.7 258.9 NE Cheyenne County 41.2 257.0 NE Clay County 40.5 262.0 NE Colfax County 41.6 262.9 NE Cuming County 41.9 263.2 NE Custer County 41.4 260.4 NE Dakota County 42.4 263.5 NE Dawes County 42.7 256.8 NE Dawson County 40.8 260.1 NE Deuel County 41.1 257.7 NE Dixon County 42.5 263.2 NE Dodge County 41.5 263.4 NE Douglas County 41.3 263.9 NE Dundy County 40.1 258.4 NE Fillmore County 40.5 262.4 NE Franklin County 40.2 261.1 NE Frontier County 40.5 259.6 NE Furnas County 40.2 260.1 NE Gage County 40.2 263.3 NE Garden County 41.5 257.7 NE Garfield County 41.8 261.0 NE Gosper County 40.6 260.2 NE Grant County 41.9 258.3 NE Greeley County 41.6 261.5 NE Hall County 40.9 261.6 NE Hamilton County 40.9 262.0 NE Harlan County 40.2 260.6 NE Hayes County 40.5 258.9 NE Hitchcock County 40.2 259.0 NE Holt County 42.5 261.3 NE Hooker County 42.0 258.9 NE Howard County 41.2 261.5 NE Jefferson County 40.2 262.9 Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NE NV NV NV NV NV NV NV NV NV NV NV NV NV NV NV NV NV NH NH NH NH NH NH NH NH NH NH NJ NJ NJ NJ NJ NJ NJ NJ NJ NJ NJ NJ NJ NJ NJ NJ NJ NJ 36 Johnson County Kearney County Keith County Keya Paha County Kimball County Knox County Lancaster County Lincoln County Logan County Loup County McPherson County Madison County Merrick County Morrill County Nance County Nemaha County Nuckolls County Otoe County Pawnee County Perkins County Phelps County Pierce County Platte County Polk County Red Willow County Richardson County Rock County Saline County Sarpy County Saunders County Scotts Bluff County Seward County Sheridan County Sherman County Sioux County Stanton County Thayer County Thomas County Thurston County Valley County Washington County Wayne County Webster County Wheeler County York County Churchill County Clark County Douglas County Elko County Esmeralda County Eureka County Humboldt County Lander County Lincoln County Lyon County Mineral County Nye County Pershing County Storey County Washoe County White Pine County Carson City Belknap County Carroll County Cheshire County Coos County Grafton County Hillsborough County Merrimack County Rockingham County Strafford County Sullivan County Atlantic County Bergen County Burlington County Camden County Cape May County Cumberland County Essex County Gloucester County Hudson County Hunterdon County Mercer County Middlesex County Monmouth County Morris County Ocean County Passaic County Salem County Somerset County 40.4 40.5 41.2 42.9 41.2 42.6 40.8 41.1 41.5 41.9 41.6 42.0 41.2 41.7 41.4 40.4 40.2 40.7 40.1 40.8 40.5 42.3 41.5 41.2 40.2 40.1 42.5 40.5 41.1 41.2 41.9 40.9 42.6 41.2 42.4 41.9 40.2 42.0 42.2 41.5 41.5 42.2 40.2 41.9 40.9 39.5 36.1 39.0 41.0 37.8 40.0 41.3 40.0 37.8 39.2 38.5 37.9 40.4 39.4 39.7 39.3 39.2 43.5 43.8 42.9 44.6 43.9 42.9 43.3 43.0 43.3 43.3 39.4 40.9 40.0 39.9 39.1 39.4 40.8 39.8 40.7 40.6 40.3 40.5 40.3 40.9 39.9 40.9 39.6 40.6 263.7 261.0 258.3 260.3 256.3 262.1 263.3 259.2 259.5 260.6 259.0 262.5 262.0 256.9 262.1 264.2 262.0 263.9 263.8 258.4 260.6 262.4 262.5 262.4 259.5 264.3 260.5 262.9 264.0 263.4 256.3 262.9 257.6 261.0 256.2 262.8 262.4 259.4 263.4 261.0 263.8 262.9 261.5 261.5 262.4 241.3 244.9 240.3 244.6 242.4 243.7 242.2 243.0 245.3 240.7 241.5 243.4 241.7 240.4 240.2 245.1 240.2 288.6 288.8 287.8 288.7 288.1 288.4 288.4 288.9 289.0 287.8 285.4 285.9 285.2 285.0 285.2 284.9 285.8 284.9 285.9 285.1 285.3 285.6 285.9 285.5 285.8 285.8 49 284.6 285.4 NJ Sussex County 41.1 285.3 NJ Union County 40.7 285.7 NJ Warren County 40.8 285.0 NM Bernalillo County 35.1 253.4 NM Catron County 34.0 251.6 NM Chaves County 33.4 255.6 NM Cibola County 35.0 252.0 NM Colfax County 36.6 255.3 NM Curry County 34.5 256.7 NM De Baca County 34.4 255.8 NM Dona Ana County 32.3 253.2 NM Eddy County 32.5 255.7 NM Grant County 32.7 251.8 NM Guadalupe County 34.9 255.2 NM Harding County 35.9 256.1 NM Hidalgo County 32.0 251.3 NM Lea County 32.7 256.7 NM Lincoln County 33.6 254.5 NM Los Alamos County 35.9 253.7 NM Luna County 32.2 252.3 NM McKinley County 35.6 251.6 NM Mora County 36.0 255.1 NM Otero County 32.8 254.2 NM Quay County 35.1 256.4 NM Rio Arriba County 36.4 253.3 NM Roosevelt County 34.1 256.6 NM Sandoval County 35.5 253.2 NM San Juan County 36.6 251.7 NM San Miguel County 35.5 254.9 NM Santa Fe County 35.6 254.0 NM Sierra County 33.1 252.7 NM Socorro County 34.2 253.0 NM Taos County 36.5 254.4 NM Torrance County 34.8 254.0 NM Union County 36.5 256.6 NM Valencia County 34.7 253.2 NY Albany County 42.7 286.2 NY Allegany County 42.2 282.0 NY Bronx County 40.8 286.1 NY Broome County 42.1 284.1 NY Cattaraugus County 42.2 281.4 NY Cayuga County 42.9 283.4 NY Chautauqua County 42.2 280.7 NY Chemung County 42.1 283.2 NY Chenango County 42.5 284.4 NY Clinton County 44.7 286.4 NY Columbia County 42.3 286.3 NY Cortland County 42.6 283.9 NY Delaware County 42.2 285.0 NY Dutchess County 41.7 286.2 NY Erie County 42.9 281.2 NY Essex County 44.2 286.3 NY Franklin County 44.6 285.7 NY Fulton County 43.1 285.6 NY Genesee County 43.0 281.8 NY Greene County 42.3 286.0 NY Hamilton County 43.6 285.5 NY Herkimer County 43.2 285.0 NY Jefferson County 44.0 284.1 NY Kings County 40.6 286.0 NY Lewis County 43.8 284.5 NY Livingston County 42.7 282.2 NY Madison County 42.9 284.3 NY Monroe County 43.2 282.4 NY Montgomery County 42.9 285.6 NY Nassau County 40.7 286.4 NY New York County 40.8 286.0 NY Niagara County 43.1 281.2 NY Oneida County 43.2 284.6 NY Onondaga County 43.0 283.8 NY Ontario County 42.9 282.7 NY Orange County 41.4 285.7 NY Orleans County 43.3 281.8 NY Oswego County 43.4 283.8 NY Otsego County 42.6 285.0 NY Putnam County 41.4 286.3 NY Queens County 40.7 286.2 NY Rensselaer County 42.7 286.4 NY Richmond County 40.6 285.9 NY Rockland County 41.1 286.0 NY St. Lawrence County 44.6 284.8 NY Saratoga County 43.0 286.2 NY Schenectady County 42.8 286.0 NY Schoharie County 42.6 285.6 NY Schuyler County 42.4 283.1 NY Seneca County 42.8 283.2 NY Steuben County 42.3 282.6 NY Suffolk County 40.8 287.0 50Sullivan County NY 41.7 285.3 NY Tioga County 42.1 283.7 Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. NY NY NY NY NY NY NY NY NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC NC 37 Tompkins County Ulster County Warren County Washington County Wayne County Westchester County Wyoming County Yates County Alamance County Alexander County Alleghany County Anson County Ashe County Avery County Beaufort County Bertie County Bladen County Brunswick County Buncombe County Burke County Cabarrus County Caldwell County Camden County Carteret County Caswell County Catawba County Chatham County Cherokee County Chowan County Clay County Cleveland County Columbus County Craven County Cumberland County Currituck County Dare County Davidson County Davie County Duplin County Durham County Edgecombe County Forsyth County Franklin County Gaston County Gates County Graham County Granville County Greene County Guilford County Halifax County Harnett County Haywood County Henderson County Hertford County Hoke County Hyde County Iredell County Jackson County Johnston County Jones County Lee County Lenoir County Lincoln County McDowell County Macon County Madison County Martin County Mecklenburg County Mitchell County Montgomery County Moore County Nash County New Hanover County Northampton County Onslow County Orange County Pamlico County Pasquotank County Pender County Perquimans County Person County Pitt County Polk County Randolph County Richmond County Robeson County Rockingham County Rowan County Rutherford County Sampson County 42.5 41.9 43.5 43.3 43.1 41.1 42.7 42.6 36.1 35.9 36.5 35.0 36.4 36.1 35.5 36.1 34.6 34.0 35.6 35.7 35.4 35.9 36.4 34.7 36.4 35.7 35.7 35.1 36.1 35.0 35.3 34.3 35.1 35.1 36.4 35.8 35.8 35.9 34.9 36.0 35.9 36.1 36.1 35.3 36.4 35.4 36.3 35.5 36.1 36.3 35.4 35.5 35.3 36.3 35.0 35.5 35.7 35.3 35.5 35.0 35.5 35.3 35.5 35.7 35.2 35.8 35.8 35.2 36.0 35.3 35.2 36.0 34.2 36.4 34.7 36.0 35.1 36.3 34.5 36.2 36.4 35.6 35.3 35.7 35.0 34.7 36.4 35.6 35.4 35.0 283.5 285.9 286.2 286.6 282.9 286.2 281.8 282.9 280.6 278.8 278.9 279.9 278.5 278.1 283.1 283.0 281.4 281.8 277.5 278.4 279.4 278.5 283.8 283.2 280.7 278.8 280.7 276.0 283.4 276.2 278.5 281.3 282.9 281.1 284.0 284.3 279.8 279.5 282.0 281.1 282.4 279.8 281.7 278.8 283.3 276.2 281.3 282.3 280.2 282.3 281.2 277.0 277.5 283.0 280.8 283.8 279.1 276.8 281.6 282.6 280.8 282.4 278.8 278.0 276.6 277.3 282.9 279.2 277.9 280.1 280.5 282.1 282.1 282.5 282.6 280.9 283.2 283.8 282.1 283.5 281.0 282.6 277.8 280.2 280.3 280.9 280.2 279.5 278.1 281.6 NC Scotland County 34.8 280.5 NC Stanly County 35.3 279.8 NC Stokes County 36.4 279.7 NC Surry County 36.4 279.3 NC Swain County 35.4 276.6 NC Transylvania County 35.2 277.2 NC Tyrrell County 35.8 283.8 NC Union County 35.0 279.4 NC Vance County 36.3 281.6 NC Wake County 35.8 281.3 NC Warren County 36.4 281.9 NC Washington County 35.9 283.4 NC Watauga County 36.2 278.3 NC Wayne County 35.4 282.0 NC Wilkes County 36.2 278.8 NC Wilson County 35.7 282.1 NC Yadkin County 36.2 279.3 NC Yancey County 35.9 277.7 ND Adams County 46.1 257.4 ND Barnes County 46.9 261.9 ND Benson County 48.1 260.6 ND Billings County 47.0 256.6 ND Bottineau County 48.8 259.2 ND Bowman County 46.1 256.6 ND Burke County 48.8 257.5 ND Burleigh County 46.9 259.4 ND Cass County 46.9 262.9 ND Cavalier County 48.8 261.5 ND Dickey County 46.1 261.5 ND Divide County 48.8 256.5 ND Dunn County 47.3 257.4 ND Eddy County 47.7 261.0 ND Emmons County 46.3 259.8 ND Foster County 47.5 261.1 ND Golden Valley County 46.9 256.1 ND Grand Forks County 47.9 262.7 ND Grant County 46.4 258.3 ND Griggs County 47.5 261.8 ND Hettinger County 46.4 257.5 ND Kidder County 47.0 260.2 ND LaMoure County 46.4 261.5 ND Logan County 46.5 260.5 ND McHenry County 48.2 259.3 ND McIntosh County 46.1 260.5 ND McKenzie County 47.8 256.6 ND McLean County 47.6 258.8 ND Mercer County 47.3 258.3 ND Morton County 46.8 258.7 ND Mountrail County 48.2 257.7 ND Nelson County 47.9 261.8 ND Oliver County 47.1 258.6 ND Pembina County 48.8 262.5 ND Pierce County 48.2 260.0 ND Ramsey County 48.2 261.2 ND Ransom County 46.5 262.3 ND Renville County 48.7 258.4 ND Richland County 46.2 263.1 ND Rolette County 48.8 260.2 ND Sargent County 46.1 262.4 ND Sheridan County 47.6 259.7 ND Sioux County 46.1 259.1 ND Slope County 46.4 256.6 ND Stark County 46.9 257.3 ND Steele County 47.5 262.3 ND Stutsman County 47.0 261.1 ND Towner County 48.7 260.8 ND Traill County 47.5 262.8 ND Walsh County 48.4 262.3 ND Ward County 48.3 258.5 ND Wells County 47.6 260.3 ND Williams County 48.3 256.5 OH Adams County 38.8 276.5 OH Allen County 40.8 275.9 OH Ashland County 40.8 277.7 OH Ashtabula County 41.8 279.2 OH Athens County 39.4 277.9 OH Auglaize County 40.5 275.7 OH Belmont County 40.0 279.1 OH Brown County 38.9 276.1 OH Butler County 39.4 275.5 OH Carroll County 40.6 278.9 OH Champaign County 40.1 276.2 OH Clark County 39.9 276.2 OH Clermont County 39.1 275.8 OH Clinton County 39.4 276.2 OH Columbiana County 40.8 279.3 OH Coshocton County 40.3 278.1 OH Crawford County 40.8 277.1 OH Cuyahoga County 41.5 278.3 OH Darke County 40.1 275.4 Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OH OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK OK 38 Defiance County Delaware County Erie County Fairfield County Fayette County Franklin County Fulton County Gallia County Geauga County Greene County Guernsey County Hamilton County Hancock County Hardin County Harrison County Henry County Highland County Hocking County Holmes County Huron County Jackson County Jefferson County Knox County Lake County Lawrence County Licking County Logan County Lorain County Lucas County Madison County Mahoning County Marion County Medina County Meigs County Mercer County Miami County Monroe County Montgomery County Morgan County Morrow County Muskingum County Noble County Ottawa County Paulding County Perry County Pickaway County Pike County Portage County Preble County Putnam County Richland County Ross County Sandusky County Scioto County Seneca County Shelby County Stark County Summit County Trumbull County Tuscarawas County Union County Van Wert County Vinton County Warren County Washington County Wayne County Williams County Wood County Wyandot County Adair County Alfalfa County Atoka County Beaver County Beckham County Blaine County Bryan County Caddo County Canadian County Carter County Cherokee County Choctaw County Cimarron County Cleveland County Coal County Comanche County Cotton County Craig County Creek County Custer County Delaware County 41.3 40.3 41.4 39.8 39.6 40.0 41.6 38.8 41.5 39.7 40.0 39.2 41.0 40.7 40.3 41.3 39.2 39.5 40.6 41.2 39.0 40.4 40.4 41.7 38.5 40.1 40.4 41.4 41.6 39.9 41.1 40.6 41.1 39.1 40.5 40.1 39.7 39.8 39.6 40.5 40.0 39.8 41.5 41.1 39.7 39.6 39.1 41.2 39.7 41.0 40.8 39.3 41.4 38.8 41.1 40.3 40.8 41.1 41.2 40.5 40.3 40.9 39.2 39.4 39.4 40.8 41.5 41.4 40.9 35.9 36.7 34.4 36.7 35.3 35.9 34.0 35.1 35.5 34.2 35.9 34.0 36.8 35.2 34.6 34.6 34.3 36.7 36.0 35.6 36.5 275.5 277.0 277.4 277.4 276.5 277.0 275.9 277.7 278.8 276.1 278.5 275.5 276.3 276.4 278.9 275.9 276.4 277.6 278.1 277.4 277.4 279.3 277.6 278.7 277.5 277.5 276.2 277.9 276.4 276.6 279.3 276.9 278.1 278.0 275.4 275.8 278.9 275.8 278.2 277.2 278.0 278.5 277.0 275.4 277.8 277.0 277.0 278.7 275.4 275.9 277.5 277.0 276.9 277.1 276.8 275.8 278.6 278.5 279.2 278.5 276.6 275.4 277.5 275.8 278.5 278.1 275.4 276.4 276.7 265.4 261.7 263.9 259.5 260.4 261.6 263.7 261.7 262.1 262.8 265.0 264.5 257.6 262.6 263.7 261.6 261.6 264.8 263.7 51 261.1 265.2 OK Dewey County 36.0 261.0 OK Ellis County 36.3 260.2 OK Garfield County 36.4 262.2 OK Garvin County 34.7 262.7 OK Grady County 35.1 262.1 OK Grant County 36.8 262.2 OK Greer County 34.9 260.5 OK Harmon County 34.7 260.1 OK Harper County 36.8 260.3 OK Haskell County 35.2 264.9 OK Hughes County 35.1 263.7 OK Jackson County 34.6 260.6 OK Jefferson County 34.1 262.1 OK Johnston County 34.3 263.3 OK Kay County 36.8 262.8 OK Kingfisher County 35.9 262.1 OK Kiowa County 34.9 261.0 OK Latimer County 34.9 264.7 OK Le Flore County 35.0 265.3 OK Lincoln County 35.7 263.1 OK Logan County 35.9 262.6 OK Love County 33.9 262.8 OK McClain County 35.0 262.5 OK McCurtain County 34.1 265.2 OK McIntosh County 35.4 264.4 OK Major County 36.3 261.6 OK Marshall County 34.0 263.3 OK Mayes County 36.3 264.8 OK Murray County 34.5 263.0 OK Muskogee County 35.7 264.6 OK Noble County 36.4 262.8 OK Nowata County 36.8 264.4 OK Okfuskee County 35.4 263.7 OK Oklahoma County 35.5 262.5 OK Okmulgee County 35.6 264.0 OK Osage County 36.6 263.6 OK Ottawa County 36.9 265.2 OK Pawnee County 36.3 263.4 OK Payne County 36.1 263.0 OK Pittsburg County 34.9 264.3 OK Pontotoc County 34.8 263.3 OK Pottawatomie County 35.3 263.1 OK Pushmataha County 34.4 264.6 OK Roger Mills County 35.7 260.3 OK Rogers County 36.3 264.4 OK Seminole County 35.2 263.4 OK Sequoyah County 35.5 265.2 OK Stephens County 34.5 262.1 OK Texas County 36.7 258.5 OK Tillman County 34.4 261.1 OK Tulsa County 36.1 264.1 OK Wagoner County 36.0 264.5 OK Washington County 36.7 264.1 OK Washita County 35.3 261.0 OK Woods County 36.7 261.2 OK Woodward County 36.4 260.7 OR Baker County 44.7 242.2 OR Benton County 44.5 236.7 OR Clackamas County 45.3 237.5 OR Clatsop County 46.0 236.2 OR Columbia County 45.9 237.0 OR Coos County 43.2 235.9 OR Crook County 44.2 239.5 OR Curry County 42.4 235.7 OR Deschutes County 44.0 238.7 OR Douglas County 43.3 236.7 OR Gilliam County 45.3 239.8 OR Grant County 44.5 241.1 OR Harney County 43.5 241.0 OR Hood River County 45.6 238.4 OR Jackson County 42.4 237.2 OR Jefferson County 44.6 238.8 OR Josephine County 42.4 236.6 OR Klamath County 42.7 238.3 OR Lake County 42.7 239.4 OR Lane County 44.0 236.9 OR Lincoln County 44.7 236.1 OR Linn County 44.5 237.3 OR Malheur County 43.6 242.6 OR Marion County 44.9 237.2 OR Morrow County 45.4 240.4 OR Multnomah County 45.5 237.4 OR Polk County 44.9 236.6 OR Sherman County 45.5 239.3 OR Tillamook County 45.5 236.2 OR Umatilla County 45.6 241.2 OR Union County 45.3 242.0 OR Wallowa County 45.6 242.7 52Wasco County OR 45.3 238.7 OR Washington County 45.5 237.1 Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. OR OR PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA PA RI RI RI RI RI SC SC SC SC SC SC SC SC SC SC SC SC SC SC SC SC 39 Wheeler County Yamhill County Adams County Allegheny County Armstrong County Beaver County Bedford County Berks County Blair County Bradford County Bucks County Butler County Cambria County Cameron County Carbon County Centre County Chester County Clarion County Clearfield County Clinton County Columbia County Crawford County Cumberland County Dauphin County Delaware County Elk County Erie County Fayette County Forest County Franklin County Fulton County Greene County Huntingdon County Indiana County Jefferson County Juniata County Lackawanna County Lancaster County Lawrence County Lebanon County Lehigh County Luzerne County Lycoming County McKean County Mercer County Mifflin County Monroe County Montgomery County Montour County Northampton County Northumberland County Perry County Philadelphia County Pike County Potter County Schuylkill County Snyder County Somerset County Sullivan County Susquehanna County Tioga County Union County Venango County Warren County Washington County Wayne County Westmoreland County Wyoming County York County Bristol County Kent County Newport County Providence County Washington County Abbeville County Aiken County Allendale County Anderson County Bamberg County Barnwell County Beaufort County Berkeley County Calhoun County Charleston County Cherokee County Chester County Chesterfield County Clarendon County Colleton County Darlington County 44.7 45.2 39.9 40.4 40.8 40.7 40.0 40.4 40.5 41.8 40.3 40.9 40.4 41.4 40.9 40.9 40.0 41.2 41.0 41.2 41.0 41.7 40.2 40.3 39.9 41.4 42.1 40.0 41.5 39.9 39.9 39.9 40.4 40.6 41.1 40.6 41.4 40.1 41.0 40.3 40.6 41.2 41.3 41.8 41.3 40.6 41.1 40.2 41.0 40.7 40.9 40.4 40.0 41.3 41.8 40.7 40.8 40.0 41.5 41.8 41.8 41.0 41.4 41.8 40.2 41.6 40.3 41.5 39.9 41.7 41.7 41.5 41.9 41.5 34.2 33.6 33.0 34.5 33.2 33.3 32.4 33.1 33.7 32.8 35.1 34.7 34.7 33.7 32.9 34.3 240.0 236.8 282.8 280.0 280.5 279.7 281.5 284.1 281.6 283.5 285.0 280.1 281.2 281.8 284.3 282.2 284.3 280.6 281.5 282.5 283.6 279.9 282.9 283.2 284.6 281.3 279.9 280.3 280.7 282.3 281.9 279.8 282.0 280.9 281.0 282.7 284.4 283.7 279.7 283.6 284.5 284.1 283.0 281.4 279.7 282.4 284.7 284.7 283.4 284.7 283.3 282.8 284.9 285.0 282.1 283.8 283.0 281.0 283.5 284.2 282.8 283.0 280.2 280.7 279.9 284.7 280.4 284.0 283.3 288.7 288.5 288.7 288.5 288.4 277.5 278.3 278.7 277.4 278.9 278.6 279.3 280.0 279.2 280.0 278.4 278.9 279.8 279.8 279.3 280.0 SC Dillon County 34.4 280.6 SC Dorchester County 33.0 279.7 SC Edgefield County 33.8 278.1 SC Fairfield County 34.4 278.9 SC Florence County 34.1 280.3 SC Georgetown County 33.4 280.7 SC Greenville County 34.9 277.6 SC Greenwood County 34.2 277.9 SC Hampton County 32.8 278.9 SC Horry County 33.8 281.1 SC Jasper County 32.4 279.0 SC Kershaw County 34.3 279.4 SC Lancaster County 34.7 279.3 SC Laurens County 34.5 278.0 SC Lee County 34.2 279.7 SC Lexington County 33.9 278.8 SC McCormick County 33.9 277.7 SC Marion County 34.2 280.7 SC Marlboro County 34.6 280.3 SC Newberry County 34.3 278.4 SC Oconee County 34.7 277.0 SC Orangeburg County 33.5 279.2 SC Pickens County 34.8 277.3 SC Richland County 34.0 279.0 SC Saluda County 34.0 278.3 SC Spartanburg County 35.0 278.0 SC Sumter County 33.9 279.6 SC Union County 34.7 278.4 SC Williamsburg County 33.6 280.3 SC York County 35.0 278.9 SD Aurora County 43.7 261.5 SD Beadle County 44.4 261.7 SD Bennett County 43.2 258.3 SD Bon Homme County 43.0 262.1 SD Brookings County 44.3 263.2 SD Brown County 45.5 261.6 SD Brule County 43.8 260.9 SD Buffalo County 44.0 260.7 SD Butte County 44.8 256.4 SD Campbell County 45.8 260.0 SD Charles Mix County 43.2 261.5 SD Clark County 44.9 262.3 SD Clay County 42.9 263.0 SD Codington County 44.9 262.8 SD Corson County 45.8 258.9 SD Custer County 43.7 256.5 SD Davison County 43.7 261.9 SD Day County 45.4 262.4 SD Deuel County 44.7 263.3 SD Dewey County 45.2 259.0 SD Douglas County 43.4 261.6 SD Edmunds County 45.4 260.8 SD Fall River County 43.3 256.4 SD Faulk County 45.1 260.9 SD Grant County 45.2 263.3 SD Gregory County 43.2 260.8 SD Haakon County 44.2 258.5 SD Hamlin County 44.7 262.8 SD Hand County 44.5 261.0 SD Hanson County 43.7 262.2 SD Harding County 45.6 256.5 SD Hughes County 44.4 259.8 SD Hutchinson County 43.3 262.3 SD Hyde County 44.6 260.5 SD Jackson County 43.8 258.3 SD Jerauld County 44.1 261.4 SD Jones County 44.0 259.3 SD Kingsbury County 44.4 262.5 SD Lake County 44.0 262.9 SD Lawrence County 44.4 256.2 SD Lincoln County 43.3 263.3 SD Lyman County 43.9 260.2 SD McCook County 43.7 262.6 SD McPherson County 45.8 260.7 SD Marshall County 45.7 262.4 SD Meade County 44.4 256.9 SD Mellette County 43.6 259.2 SD Miner County 44.0 262.4 SD Minnehaha County 43.6 263.3 SD Moody County 44.0 263.3 SD Pennington County 44.0 256.9 SD Perkins County 45.6 257.6 SD Potter County 45.0 260.1 SD Roberts County 45.6 263.1 SD Sanborn County 44.0 261.9 SD Shannon County 43.3 257.5 SD Spink County 44.9 261.6 SD Stanley County 44.4 259.4 SD Sully County 44.7 259.9 SD Todd County 43.2 259.2 Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. SD SD SD SD SD SD TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN TN 40 Tripp County Turner County Union County Walworth County Yankton County Ziebach County Anderson County Bedford County Benton County Bledsoe County Blount County Bradley County Campbell County Cannon County Carroll County Carter County Cheatham County Chester County Claiborne County Clay County Cocke County Coffee County Crockett County Cumberland County Davidson County Decatur County DeKalb County Dickson County Dyer County Fayette County Fentress County Franklin County Gibson County Giles County Grainger County Greene County Grundy County Hamblen County Hamilton County Hancock County Hardeman County Hardin County Hawkins County Haywood County Henderson County Henry County Hickman County Houston County Humphreys County Jackson County Jefferson County Johnson County Knox County Lake County Lauderdale County Lawrence County Lewis County Lincoln County Loudon County McMinn County McNairy County Macon County Madison County Marion County Marshall County Maury County Meigs County Monroe County Montgomery County Moore County Morgan County Obion County Overton County Perry County Pickett County Polk County Putnam County Rhea County Roane County Robertson County Rutherford County Scott County Sequatchie County Sevier County Shelby County Smith County Stewart County Sullivan County Sumner County Tipton County 43.4 43.3 42.8 45.5 43.0 45.0 36.1 35.5 36.1 35.6 35.8 35.2 36.4 35.8 36.0 36.3 36.3 35.4 36.5 36.6 35.9 35.5 35.8 35.9 36.2 35.6 36.0 36.1 36.1 35.2 36.4 35.2 36.0 35.2 36.3 36.2 35.4 36.2 35.1 36.5 35.2 35.2 36.4 35.6 35.6 36.3 35.8 36.3 36.1 36.4 36.1 36.4 36.0 36.3 35.8 35.2 35.5 35.1 35.7 35.4 35.2 36.5 35.6 35.1 35.5 35.6 35.5 35.5 36.5 35.3 36.1 36.4 36.4 35.6 36.6 35.1 36.2 35.6 35.9 36.5 35.9 36.4 35.4 35.8 35.1 36.2 36.5 36.5 36.4 35.5 260.1 262.9 263.3 259.9 262.6 258.3 275.8 273.6 271.9 274.8 276.0 275.1 275.9 273.9 271.6 277.8 272.9 271.4 276.3 274.5 276.9 273.9 270.9 275.0 273.2 271.9 274.1 272.6 270.6 270.6 275.1 273.9 271.1 273.0 276.5 277.2 274.3 276.7 274.8 276.8 271.0 271.8 277.1 270.7 271.6 271.7 272.6 272.3 272.2 274.3 276.6 278.2 276.0 270.5 270.5 272.6 272.5 273.4 275.7 275.4 271.4 274.0 271.2 274.4 273.2 272.9 275.2 275.7 272.6 273.6 275.4 270.9 274.7 272.1 274.9 275.5 274.5 275.1 275.5 273.1 273.6 275.5 274.6 276.5 270.1 274.0 272.2 277.6 53 273.5 270.3 TN Trousdale County 36.4 273.8 TN Unicoi County 36.1 277.6 TN Union County 36.3 276.2 TN Van Buren County 35.7 274.5 TN Warren County 35.7 274.2 TN Washington County 36.3 277.6 TN Wayne County 35.2 272.2 TN Weakley County 36.3 271.3 TN White County 35.9 274.5 TN Williamson County 35.9 273.1 TN Wilson County 36.2 273.7 TX Anderson County 31.8 264.4 TX Andrews County 32.3 257.4 TX Angelina County 31.3 265.3 TX Aransas County 28.0 263.0 TX Archer County 33.7 261.3 TX Armstrong County 35.0 258.6 TX Atascosa County 28.9 261.5 TX Austin County 29.9 263.8 TX Bailey County 34.1 257.2 TX Bandera County 29.7 260.9 TX Bastrop County 30.1 262.7 TX Baylor County 33.6 260.7 TX Bee County 28.4 262.3 TX Bell County 31.1 262.5 TX Bexar County 29.5 261.5 TX Blanco County 30.2 261.6 TX Borden County 32.7 258.6 TX Bosque County 31.9 262.4 TX Bowie County 33.4 265.7 TX Brazoria County 29.2 264.6 TX Brazos County 30.6 263.7 TX Brewster County 30.0 256.6 TX Briscoe County 34.5 258.7 TX Brooks County 27.1 261.8 TX Brown County 31.8 261.0 TX Burleson County 30.4 263.4 TX Burnet County 30.7 261.8 TX Caldwell County 29.8 262.3 TX Calhoun County 28.5 263.4 TX Callahan County 32.3 260.6 TX Cameron County 26.1 262.4 TX Camp County 33.0 265.0 TX Carson County 35.4 258.7 TX Cass County 33.1 265.7 TX Castro County 34.5 257.7 TX Chambers County 29.8 265.3 TX Cherokee County 31.9 264.8 TX Childress County 34.5 259.8 TX Clay County 33.8 261.8 TX Cochran County 33.7 257.2 TX Coke County 31.9 259.5 TX Coleman County 31.8 260.6 TX Collin County 33.1 263.4 TX Collingsworth County 34.9 259.8 TX Colorado County 29.6 263.5 TX Comal County 29.8 261.8 TX Comanche County 32.0 261.4 TX Concho County 31.3 260.1 TX Cooke County 33.6 262.8 TX Coryell County 31.3 262.2 TX Cottle County 34.1 259.7 TX Crane County 31.4 257.5 TX Crockett County 30.7 258.6 TX Crosby County 33.6 258.7 TX Culberson County 31.3 255.4 TX Dallam County 36.2 257.3 TX Dallas County 32.8 263.2 TX Dawson County 32.7 258.1 TX Deaf Smith County 34.9 257.5 TX Delta County 33.4 264.3 TX Denton County 33.1 262.9 TX DeWitt County 29.1 262.7 TX Dickens County 33.6 259.2 TX Dimmit County 28.5 260.2 TX Donley County 35.0 259.2 TX Duval County 27.7 261.5 TX Eastland County 32.3 261.2 TX Ector County 31.9 257.6 TX Edwards County 30.0 259.8 TX Ellis County 32.4 263.2 TX El Paso County 31.8 253.6 TX Erath County 32.2 261.8 TX Falls County 31.3 263.0 TX Fannin County 33.6 263.8 TX Fayette County 29.9 263.1 TX Fisher County 32.8 259.6 TX Floyd County 34.1 258.7 54Foard County TX 34.0 260.2 TX Fort Bend County 29.6 264.3 Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX TX 41 Franklin County Freestone County Frio County Gaines County Galveston County Garza County Gillespie County Glasscock County Goliad County Gonzales County Gray County Grayson County Gregg County Grimes County Guadalupe County Hale County Hall County Hamilton County Hansford County Hardeman County Hardin County Harris County Harrison County Hartley County Haskell County Hays County Hemphill County Henderson County Hidalgo County Hill County Hockley County Hood County Hopkins County Houston County Howard County Hudspeth County Hunt County Hutchinson County Irion County Jack County Jackson County Jasper County Jeff Davis County Jefferson County Jim Hogg County Jim Wells County Johnson County Jones County Karnes County Kaufman County Kendall County Kenedy County Kent County Kerr County Kimble County King County Kinney County Kleberg County Knox County Lamar County Lamb County Lampasas County La Salle County Lavaca County Lee County Leon County Liberty County Limestone County Lipscomb County Live Oak County Llano County Loving County Lubbock County Lynn County McCulloch County McLennan County McMullen County Madison County Marion County Martin County Mason County Matagorda County Maverick County Medina County Menard County Midland County Milam County Mills County Mitchell County Montague County 33.1 31.7 28.9 32.8 29.4 33.2 30.3 31.9 28.7 29.5 35.4 33.7 32.5 30.5 29.6 34.1 34.5 31.8 36.3 34.3 30.3 29.8 32.5 35.9 33.2 30.0 35.8 32.2 26.2 32.0 33.6 32.4 33.1 31.3 32.2 31.5 33.1 35.7 31.3 33.2 28.9 30.8 30.7 30.0 27.1 27.7 32.4 32.8 28.9 32.6 29.9 26.9 33.2 30.0 30.5 33.6 29.3 27.5 33.5 33.7 34.1 31.1 28.4 29.4 30.3 31.3 30.2 31.6 36.3 28.3 30.7 31.8 33.6 33.2 31.2 31.5 28.4 31.0 32.8 32.3 30.8 28.9 28.7 29.3 30.9 32.0 30.8 31.5 32.3 33.7 264.8 263.8 260.9 257.3 265.1 258.7 261.1 258.5 262.6 262.5 259.1 263.4 265.2 264.0 262.0 258.2 259.3 261.9 258.7 260.3 265.7 264.6 265.6 257.4 260.2 262.0 259.7 264.1 261.8 262.8 257.6 262.2 264.4 264.6 258.6 254.6 263.9 258.6 259.0 261.8 263.4 266.0 255.9 265.9 261.3 261.9 262.7 260.1 262.1 263.7 261.3 262.3 259.3 260.8 260.3 259.7 259.6 262.1 260.3 264.4 257.6 261.8 260.8 263.0 263.1 263.9 265.2 263.4 259.7 261.9 261.4 256.4 258.1 258.2 260.7 262.8 261.5 264.0 265.6 258.1 260.8 264.0 259.6 261.0 260.2 257.9 263.0 261.4 259.1 262.3 TX Montgomery County 30.3 264.5 TX Moore County 35.9 258.1 TX Morris County 33.1 265.3 TX Motley County 34.1 259.2 TX Nacogdoches County 31.6 265.4 TX Navarro County 32.1 263.5 TX Newton County 30.8 266.3 TX Nolan County 32.4 259.6 TX Nueces County 27.7 262.5 TX Ochiltree County 36.3 259.2 TX Oldham County 35.4 257.4 TX Orange County 30.1 266.2 TX Palo Pinto County 32.8 261.7 TX Panola County 32.2 265.7 TX Parker County 32.8 262.2 TX Parmer County 34.5 257.2 TX Pecos County 30.9 257.3 TX Polk County 30.8 265.1 TX Potter County 35.3 258.2 TX Presidio County 30.0 255.8 TX Rains County 32.9 264.2 TX Randall County 35.1 258.1 TX Reagan County 31.3 258.5 TX Real County 29.8 260.1 TX Red River County 33.6 264.9 TX Reeves County 31.3 256.4 TX Refugio County 28.3 262.8 TX Roberts County 35.8 259.2 TX Robertson County 31.0 263.4 TX Rockwall County 32.9 263.6 TX Runnels County 31.8 260.0 TX Rusk County 32.2 265.2 TX Sabine County 31.3 266.1 TX San Augustine County 31.4 265.8 TX San Jacinto County 30.6 264.9 TX San Patricio County 28.0 262.5 TX San Saba County 31.2 261.2 TX Schleicher County 30.9 259.5 TX Scurry County 32.7 259.0 TX Shackelford County 32.7 260.7 TX Shelby County 31.8 265.9 TX Sherman County 36.3 258.1 TX Smith County 32.3 264.7 TX Somervell County 32.2 262.2 TX Starr County 26.5 261.2 TX Stephens County 32.7 261.1 TX Sterling County 31.8 259.0 TX Stonewall County 33.2 259.8 TX Sutton County 30.5 259.4 TX Swisher County 34.5 258.3 TX Tarrant County 32.8 262.7 TX Taylor County 32.4 260.2 TX Terrell County 30.2 257.9 TX Terry County 33.2 257.7 TX Throckmorton County 33.2 260.8 TX Titus County 33.2 265.0 TX Tom Green County 31.4 259.5 TX Travis County 30.3 262.2 TX Trinity County 31.0 264.8 TX Tyler County 30.8 265.6 TX Upshur County 32.7 265.1 TX Upton County 31.3 257.9 TX Uvalde County 29.3 260.3 TX Val Verde County 29.6 259.0 TX Van Zandt County 32.6 264.2 TX Victoria County 28.8 263.0 TX Walker County 30.7 264.5 TX Waller County 30.0 264.0 TX Ward County 31.5 257.0 TX Washington County 30.2 263.6 TX Webb County 27.6 260.6 TX Wharton County 29.3 263.8 TX Wheeler County 35.4 259.7 TX Wichita County 33.9 261.4 TX Wilbarger County 34.1 260.8 TX Willacy County 26.5 262.2 TX Williamson County 30.6 262.3 TX Wilson County 29.2 261.9 TX Winkler County 31.8 256.9 TX Wise County 33.2 262.3 TX Wood County 32.8 264.6 TX Yoakum County 33.1 257.2 TX Young County 33.2 261.3 TX Zapata County 27.0 260.8 TX Zavala County 28.9 260.2 UT Beaver County 38.3 247.0 UT Box Elder County 41.6 247.5 UT Cache County 41.8 248.2 UT Carbon County 39.6 249.2 UT Daggett County 40.9 250.5 Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. UT UT UT UT UT UT UT UT UT UT UT UT UT UT UT UT UT UT UT UT UT UT UT UT VT VT VT VT VT VT VT VT VT VT VT VT VT VT VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA VA 42 Davis County Duchesne County Emery County Garfield County Grand County Iron County Juab County Kane County Millard County Morgan County Piute County Rich County Salt Lake County San Juan County Sanpete County Sevier County Summit County Tooele County Uintah County Utah County Wasatch County Washington County Wayne County Weber County Addison County Bennington County Caledonia County Chittenden County Essex County Franklin County Grand Isle County Lamoille County Orange County Orleans County Rutland County Washington County Windham County Windsor County Accomack County Albemarle County Alleghany County Amelia County Amherst County Appomattox County Arlington County Augusta County Bath County Bedford County Bland County Botetourt County Brunswick County Buchanan County Buckingham County Campbell County Caroline County Carroll County Charles City County Charlotte County Chesterfield County Clarke County Craig County Culpeper County Cumberland County Dickenson County Dinwiddie County Essex County Fairfax County Fauquier County Floyd County Fluvanna County Franklin County Frederick County Giles County Gloucester County Goochland County Grayson County Greene County Greensville County Halifax County Hanover County Henrico County Henry County Highland County Isle of Wight County James City County King and Queen County King George County King William County Lancaster County Lee County 41.0 40.2 39.2 37.8 38.8 37.8 39.7 37.3 39.1 41.1 38.3 41.7 40.7 37.4 39.4 38.8 40.8 40.4 40.3 40.2 40.5 37.2 38.3 41.2 44.0 43.0 44.5 44.5 44.7 44.9 44.8 44.6 44.0 44.8 43.6 44.2 43.0 43.6 37.8 38.0 37.8 37.3 37.6 37.4 38.9 38.1 38.0 37.3 37.1 37.5 36.8 37.3 37.6 37.2 38.0 36.7 37.3 37.0 37.4 39.1 37.5 38.5 37.5 37.1 37.1 37.9 38.8 38.7 36.9 37.9 37.0 39.2 37.3 37.4 37.7 36.6 38.3 36.7 36.7 37.7 37.6 36.7 38.4 36.9 37.3 37.7 38.3 37.7 37.7 36.7 248.1 249.7 249.1 248.1 250.5 246.8 247.7 247.6 247.1 248.4 247.9 248.7 248.1 250.5 248.4 248.1 248.7 247.3 250.4 248.3 248.6 246.5 248.7 248.0 286.8 286.9 287.9 286.9 288.3 287.0 286.7 287.4 287.6 287.8 286.9 287.4 287.3 287.5 284.4 281.5 280.0 282.0 280.9 281.2 282.9 280.9 280.3 280.4 278.9 280.2 282.1 278.0 281.5 280.9 282.6 279.3 282.9 281.4 282.5 282.0 279.8 282.0 281.7 277.6 282.4 283.1 282.8 282.2 279.6 281.7 280.1 281.8 279.3 283.5 282.1 278.8 281.5 282.4 281.1 282.6 282.5 280.1 280.4 283.3 283.2 283.1 282.8 283.0 55 283.5 276.9 VA Loudoun County 39.1 282.4 VA Louisa County 38.0 282.0 VA Lunenburg County 36.9 281.8 VA Madison County 38.4 281.7 VA Mathews County 37.4 283.7 VA Mecklenburg County 36.7 281.7 VA Middlesex County 37.6 283.5 VA Montgomery County 37.2 279.6 VA Nelson County 37.8 281.1 VA New Kent County 37.5 283.0 VA Northampton County 37.4 284.1 VA Northumberland County 37.9 283.6 VA Nottoway County 37.1 281.9 VA Orange County 38.2 281.9 VA Page County 38.6 281.5 VA Patrick County 36.7 279.7 VA Pittsylvania County 36.8 280.6 VA Powhatan County 37.6 282.1 VA Prince Edward County 37.2 281.6 VA Prince George County 37.2 282.7 VA Prince William County 38.7 282.6 VA Pulaski County 37.1 279.3 VA Rappahannock County 38.7 281.8 VA Richmond County 37.9 283.3 VA Roanoke County 37.3 280.0 VA Rockbridge County 37.8 280.6 VA Rockingham County 38.5 281.2 VA Russell County 36.9 277.9 VA Scott County 36.7 277.4 VA Shenandoah County 38.9 281.4 VA Smyth County 36.8 278.4 VA Southampton County 36.7 282.9 VA Spotsylvania County 38.2 282.4 VA Stafford County 38.4 282.6 VA Surry County 37.1 283.1 VA Sussex County 36.9 282.7 VA Tazewell County 37.1 278.4 VA Warren County 38.9 281.8 VA Washington County 36.7 278.0 VA Westmoreland County 38.2 283.2 VA Wise County 37.0 277.4 VA Wythe County 36.9 278.9 VA York County 37.2 283.5 VA Alexandria city 38.8 282.9 VA Bedford city 37.3 280.5 VA Bristol city 36.6 277.8 VA Buena Vista city 37.7 280.6 VA Charlottesville city 38.0 281.5 VA Chesapeake city 36.8 283.7 VA Clifton Forge city 37.8 280.2 VA Colonial Heights city 37.3 282.6 VA Covington city 37.8 280.0 VA Danville city 36.6 280.6 VA Emporia city 36.7 282.5 VA Fairfax city 38.9 282.7 VA Falls Church city 38.9 282.8 VA Franklin city 36.7 283.1 VA Fredericksburg city 38.3 282.5 VA Galax city 36.7 279.1 VA Hampton city 37.0 283.6 VA Harrisonburg city 38.4 281.1 VA Hopewell city 37.3 282.7 VA Lexington city 37.8 280.6 VA Lynchburg city 37.4 280.8 VA Manassas city 38.8 282.5 VA Manassas Park city 38.8 282.5 VA Martinsville city 36.7 280.1 VA Newport News city 37.1 283.5 VA Norfolk city 36.9 283.7 VA Norton city 36.9 277.4 VA Petersburg city 37.2 282.6 VA Poquoson city 37.1 283.6 VA Portsmouth city 36.8 283.7 VA Radford city 37.1 279.4 VA Richmond city 37.5 282.5 VA Roanoke city 37.3 280 VA Salem city 37.3 279.9 VA Staunton city 38.2 280.9 VA Suffolk city 36.7 283.4 VA Virginia Beach city 36.8 283.9 VA Waynesboro city 38.1 281.1 VA Williamsburg city 37.3 283.3 VA Winchester city 39.2 281.8 WA Adams County 47.0 241.3 WA Asotin County 46.3 242.9 WA Benton County 46.2 240.6 WA Chelan County 47.6 239.6 WA Clallam County 48.1 236.2 56Clark County WA 45.7 237.5 WA Columbia County 46.3 242.0 Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WA WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WV WI WI WI 43 Cowlitz County Douglas County Ferry County Franklin County Garfield County Grant County Grays Harbor County Island County Jefferson County King County Kitsap County Kittitas County Klickitat County Lewis County Lincoln County Mason County Okanogan County Pacific County Pend Oreille County Pierce County San Juan County Skagit County Skamania County Snohomish County Spokane County Stevens County Thurston County Wahkiakum County Walla Walla County Whatcom County Whitman County Yakima County Barbour County Berkeley County Boone County Braxton County Brooke County Cabell County Calhoun County Clay County Doddridge County Fayette County Gilmer County Grant County Greenbrier County Hampshire County Hancock County Hardy County Harrison County Jackson County Jefferson County Kanawha County Lewis County Lincoln County Logan County McDowell County Marion County Marshall County Mason County Mercer County Mineral County Mingo County Monongalia County Monroe County Morgan County Nicholas County Ohio County Pendleton County Pleasants County Pocahontas County Preston County Putnam County Raleigh County Randolph County Ritchie County Roane County Summers County Taylor County Tucker County Tyler County Upshur County Wayne County Webster County Wetzel County Wirt County Wood County Wyoming County Adams County Ashland County Barron County 46.2 47.7 48.5 46.4 46.4 47.2 47.1 48.2 47.9 47.5 47.6 47.1 45.9 46.6 47.6 47.3 48.5 46.5 48.5 47.2 48.6 48.5 45.9 48.0 47.7 48.4 47.0 46.3 46.1 48.8 46.9 46.5 39.1 39.5 38.1 38.7 40.3 38.4 38.9 38.5 39.3 38.0 38.9 39.1 37.9 39.3 40.5 39.0 39.3 38.8 39.3 38.3 39.0 38.2 37.8 37.4 39.5 39.9 38.8 37.3 39.4 37.7 39.6 37.6 39.6 38.3 40.1 38.7 39.4 38.3 39.5 38.5 37.8 38.8 39.2 38.7 37.7 39.3 39.1 39.5 38.9 38.2 38.5 39.6 39.0 39.3 37.6 44.0 46.3 45.4 237.3 240.1 241.5 241.0 242.5 240.6 236.2 237.4 236.8 237.8 237.4 239.3 239.0 237.3 241.6 236.9 240.4 236.2 242.7 237.6 237.0 237.8 238.0 237.9 242.6 242.2 237.2 236.5 241.6 237.6 242.6 239.5 280.0 282.0 278.3 279.3 279.4 277.7 278.9 278.9 279.3 278.9 279.2 280.8 279.5 281.4 279.4 281.1 279.7 278.3 282.2 278.4 279.5 277.9 278.0 278.4 279.8 279.3 278.0 278.8 281.1 277.8 280.0 279.4 281.7 279.2 279.3 280.7 278.8 280.0 280.3 278.1 278.8 280.1 278.9 278.6 279.2 280.0 280.4 279.1 279.8 277.5 279.6 279.3 278.6 278.5 278.5 270.2 269.3 268.2 WI Bayfield County 46.5 268.8 WI Brown County 44.5 272.0 WI Buffalo County 44.4 268.2 WI Burnett County 45.9 267.6 WI Calumet County 44.1 271.8 WI Chippewa County 45.0 268.7 WI Clark County 44.8 269.4 WI Columbia County 43.5 270.7 WI Crawford County 43.2 269.0 WI Dane County 43.1 270.6 WI Dodge County 43.4 271.3 WI Door County 45.0 272.7 WI Douglas County 46.5 268.1 WI Dunn County 44.9 268.1 WI Eau Claire County 44.8 268.6 WI Florence County 45.8 271.6 WI Fond du Lac County 43.8 271.5 WI Forest County 45.6 271.2 WI Grant County 42.9 269.3 WI Green County 42.7 270.4 WI Green Lake County 43.8 271.0 WI Iowa County 43.0 269.9 WI Iron County 46.3 269.8 WI Jackson County 44.3 269.1 WI Jefferson County 43.0 271.2 WI Juneau County 43.9 269.9 WI Kenosha County 42.6 272.0 WI Kewaunee County 44.5 272.4 WI La Crosse County 43.9 268.8 WI Lafayette County 42.7 269.9 WI Langlade County 45.2 270.9 WI Lincoln County 45.3 270.3 WI Manitowoc County 44.1 272.2 WI Marathon County 44.9 270.3 WI Marinette County 45.3 272.1 WI Marquette County 43.8 270.6 WI Menominee County 44.9 271.4 WI Milwaukee County 43.0 272.0 WI Monroe County 43.9 269.4 WI Oconto County 45.0 271.8 WI Oneida County 45.7 270.5 WI Outagamie County 44.3 271.6 WI Ozaukee County 43.3 272.1 WI Pepin County 44.6 268.0 WI Pierce County 44.7 267.5 WI Polk County 45.5 267.5 WI Portage County 44.5 270.5 WI Price County 45.7 269.6 WI Racine County 42.7 272.0 WI Richland County 43.4 269.6 WI Rock County 42.7 271.0 WI Rusk County 45.4 268.9 WI St. Croix County 45.0 267.5 WI Sauk County 43.4 270.1 WI Sawyer County 45.9 268.7 WI Shawano County 44.8 271.2 WI Sheboygan County 43.7 272.1 WI Taylor County 45.2 269.5 WI Trempealeau County 44.3 268.6 WI Vernon County 43.6 269.2 WI Vilas County 46.0 270.5 WI Walworth County 42.6 271.5 WI Washburn County 45.9 268.2 WI Washington County 43.4 271.8 WI Waukesha County 43.0 271.7 WI Waupaca County 44.5 271.0 WI Waushara County 44.1 270.7 WI Winnebago County 44.1 271.4 WI Wood County 44.4 270.0 WY Albany County 41.4 254.3 WY Big Horn County 44.5 251.9 WY Campbell County 44.1 254.5 WY Carbon County 41.7 253.1 WY Converse County 42.9 254.5 WY Crook County 44.6 255.4 WY Fremont County 43.1 251.3 WY Goshen County 42.1 255.7 WY Hot Springs County 43.7 251.7 WY Johnson County 44.1 253.4 WY Laramie County 41.2 255.2 WY Lincoln County 42.2 249.3 WY Natrona County 42.9 253.5 WY Niobrara County 43.0 255.5 WY Park County 44.6 251.0 WY Platte County 42.2 255.1 WY Sheridan County 44.8 253.0 WY Sublette County 42.8 250.0 WY Sweetwater County 41.6 250.8 WY Teton County 43.6 249.3 WY Uinta County 41.3 249.4 Source: US Census Bureau. Data is provided "as-is". Not responsible for errors. WY WY PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR PR Washakie County Weston County Adjuntas Municipio Aguada Municipio Aguadilla Municipio Aguas Buenas Municipio Aibonito Municipio A±asco Municipio Arecibo Municipio Arroyo Municipio Barceloneta Municipio Barranquitas Municipio Bayam?n Municipio Cabo Rojo Municipio Caguas Municipio Camuy Municipio Can?vanas Municipio Carolina Municipio Cata±o Municipio Cayey Municipio Ceiba Municipio Ciales Municipio Cidra Municipio Coamo Municipio Comer?o Municipio Corozal Municipio Culebra Municipio Dorado Municipio Fajardo Municipio Florida Municipio Gußnica Municipio Guayama Municipio Guayanilla Municipio Guaynabo Municipio Gurabo Municipio Hatillo Municipio Hormigueros Municipio Humacao Municipio Isabela Municipio Jayuya Municipio Juana D?az Municipio Juncos Municipio Lajas Municipio Lares Municipio Las Mar?as Municipio Las Piedras Municipio Lo?za Municipio Luquillo Municipio Manat? Municipio Maricao Municipio Maunabo Municipio Mayag?ez Municipio Moca Municipio Morovis Municipio Naguabo Municipio Naranjito Municipio Orocovis Municipio Patillas Municipio Pe±uelas Municipio Ponce Municipio Quebradillas Municipio Rinc?n Municipio R?o Grande Municipio Sabana Grande Municipio Salinas Municipio San Germßn Municipio San Juan Municipio San Lorenzo Municipio San Sebastißn Municipio Santa Isabel Municipio Toa Alta Municipio Toa Baja Municipio Trujillo Alto Municipio Utuado Municipio Vega Alta Municipio Vega Baja Municipio Vieques Municipio Villalba Municipio Yabucoa Municipio Yauco Municipio 44.0 43.9 18.2 18.4 18.5 18.3 18.1 18.3 18.4 18.0 18.5 18.2 18.4 18.1 18.2 18.4 18.4 18.4 18.4 18.1 18.3 18.3 18.2 18.1 18.2 18.3 18.3 18.4 18.3 18.4 18.0 18.0 18.0 18.4 18.3 18.4 18.1 18.1 18.5 18.2 18.0 18.2 18.0 18.3 18.2 18.2 18.4 18.4 18.4 18.2 18.0 18.2 18.4 18.3 18.2 18.3 18.2 18.0 18.1 18.0 18.5 18.3 18.4 18.1 18.0 18.1 18.4 18.2 18.3 18.0 18.4 18.4 18.3 18.3 18.4 18.4 18.1 18.1 18.1 18.1 252.3 255.4 293.3 292.8 292.9 293.9 293.7 292.9 293.3 293.9 293.4 293.7 293.8 292.8 294.0 293.1 294.1 294.0 293.9 293.8 294.3 293.5 293.8 293.6 293.8 293.7 294.7 293.7 294.3 293.4 293.1 293.9 293.2 293.9 294.0 293.2 292.9 294.2 293.0 293.4 293.5 294.1 293.0 293.1 293.0 294.1 294.1 294.3 293.5 293.0 294.1 292.9 292.9 293.6 294.3 293.7 293.6 294.0 293.3 293.4 293.1 292.8 294.2 293.1 293.7 293.0 293.9 294.0 293.0 293.6 293.8 293.8 294.0 293.3 293.7 293.6 294.5 293.5 294.1 293.1 57 44 Appendix B: Table of time zone difference from UTC Time Zone Atlantic Time Eastern Time Major Cities San Juan Boston, New York, Washington DC, Miami Central Time Minneapolis, New Orleans, Houston, Chicago Mountain Time Salt Lake City, Boise, Denver Pacific Time Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Las Vegas Alaska Time Fairbanks Hawaii-Aleutian Honolulu Time Symbol AST EST Difference from UTC 20 19 CST 18 MST PST 17 16 AKST HAST 15 14 Enter the difference from UTC (Coordinated Universal Time)/GMT (Greenwich Mean Time) for your time zone when you configure the Professional Weather Station as par section 3.1. Do not consider daylight saving time when making this entry. Follow instuctions for setting the status of daylight saving time as a separate entry. 58 19. Brief Instructions 3 Step 1 Install the mast (own mast or separately purchased mast) and put on the multipurpose sensor (See from Page 11) Step 2 4 Open the battery compartment of the multipurpose sensor, turn the lower part to the left and slide it downwards (See from Page 11) 3 Step 3 Insert the batteries into the multipurpose sensor, close the battery compartment (See Page 13) Step 4 4 Insert the batteries into the base station; do not press any key at the base station! (See Page 14) 3 Step 5 Wait 15 minutes to allow the base station to identify the sensor(s) (See Page 14) Step 6 4 Configure the base station (set the date, time, etc.) (See from Page 18) 3 Step 7 Set up the base station by using a foot or hanging it on the wall (See Page 15) 59 Key Functions IN Short key pressure: Switching between the indoor temperature indication and the dew point temperature Long key pressure (min. 2 seconds, till the display changes): Call-up of the configuration mode (see back of the housing for key layout) SENSOR If applicable, selection of additional outdoor sensors (display of SENSOR and sensor number (1….8)) (if only the multipurpose sensor is used, the display will not change) In the IN/MAX mode: indication of the point of time at which the MIN/MAX value has been measured MIN MAX Call-up of the MIN/MAX values: press once: MIN values (MIN appears in the display) press twice: MAX values (MAX appears in the display) press three times: back to normal display During the MIN or MAX display, use the SENSOR key to call up/indicate the point of time at which the MIN/MAX value has been measured Sequence of indication: indoor temperature Æ indoor air humidity Æ outdoor temperature Æ outdoor air humidity Æ wind speed (MAX value only) Deletion of the currently displayed MIN/MAX value(s): Press the RESET key for at least 2 seconds till the values indicated are deleted (lines appear instead of numeric values) RESET In the MIN/MAX mode: Long key pressure (at least for 2 seconds) deletes the corresponding MIN/MAX values OUT Switching between the outdoor temperature indication and the windchill temperature 60
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