cheesewonton,
Blackheart is correct...now onto other matters.
This will be my last response in this thread. You literally have no idea what you're talking about because you obviously have never been in a lab, written college grade reports and been overseen/graded by PhD professors. I have (think graduate level). I have also taught Math, Physics and various computer science (think programming/networking/hardware) courses in High School and College. I actually make great efforts to obtain the most accurate, repeatable laboratory grade measurements as a rule on my channel. That's why I started it back in May of 2017.
I have two vane type anemometers, a GM8901 and a HP-846A. The HP-846A has a built in calculation (CFM) function, the GM8901 does not, so you use the ratio I stated before. You will see these in my videos on my YouTube channel.
From cheesewonton: "If you are using a propeller anemometer your measurements are not accurate."
Completely false statement made by someone who isn't familiar with the equipment. Stop repeating it!
At this point I can guarantee that you don't know how to use your hotwire anemometer either. Have you calibrated it for your environment?
1) Elevation correction
2) Temperature/Humidity correction
And don't forget a standardized supply load voltage for your vacuums.
Through using a series of cone shaped adapters (easily made),
ANY vacuum port can be fitted properly to
ANY vane adapter. Basic Physics dude.
My test lab typical specs:
loaded test voltage range (120-121 VAC), temp. 67-69 F, humidity 35%-45%, elevation 840 feet (close to USA populated avg. of 636 feet).
Here's an elevation versus pressure pdf
https://www.nwflowtech.com/media/0y0aizb3/nwft-barometric-pressure-vs-altitude-table-122120-v2.pdf
I've spent about 1000 hours in high-end labs (chemistry, physics, biology (yuck)) before I fully understood how to setup my own correctly.
Best of luck in your testing journey but you'd better learn how to use your equipment properly and refrain from posting false info which you have here.
Bill