Pressure Altimeter

3.9
109 reviews
10K+
Downloads
Content rating
Everyone
Screenshot image
Screenshot image

About this app

Does what it says on the tin. This is a basic barometric pressure altimeter. Uses your Android device's built-in barometer to implement a standard pressure altimeter. Only works on devices with barometers.

Great for hikers or anybody else who would like to know their elevation.

No ads. No spyware. No nonsense.

Instructions:

Go to settings and set your preferred units: feet or meters; inches of mercury or millibars.

Find out the local altimeter setting (pilots can get this from the nearest airport). This will look something like "29.92" (inches of mercury) or "1013" (millibars). Touch the display to bring up the Kollsman window. Set this to the local altimeter setting on the left. Now you simply look at the display. Altitude is displayed numerically on the left, and via the three hands. The very skinny hand ending with a triangle represents 10,000 feet (or meters), the short fat hand is 1,000 feet, and the long hand is 100 feet. You read it pretty much like a clock.

If you don't know the local altimeter setting, use 29.92.

OR, if you know your altitude and want to find the altimeter setting, use the Kollsman window and just enter your altitude on the right.


This is what is known in aviation as a "sensitive altimeter", meaning that altitude is calibrated based on a sea-level reference pressure. Touch the altimeter face to bring up the Kollsman adjustment window. Enter the current sea-level pressure (altimeter setting) to calibrate the altimeter. OR, enter the known local elevation to get the altimeter setting.

See Wikipedia for more information about sensitive altimeters and how they're used: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altimeter. Aviation altimeter settings can be obtained from aviation weather reports (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/METAR) and airport information broadcasts (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atis) if you have an aircraft-band radio.

Pro-tip: use the Kollsman window to set the local elevation to zero, to get the local barometric pressure.

Preferences allow you to select altitude (meters or feet), pressure units (inches mercury or millibars), screen orientation, and keep screen on.

Not approved for aviation use. Compare to a real altimeter before you even think of using this, even as a backup.

Privacy policy: this app never collects personal data of any kind and it never even connects to the internet. It does not display ads.
Updated on
Jan 6, 2015

Data safety

Safety starts with understanding how developers collect and share your data. Data privacy and security practices may vary based on your use, region, and age. The developer provided this information and may update it over time.
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Ratings and reviews

3.9
109 reviews
Keith Bryan
December 14, 2022
I am a long time pilot. Don't use this much in our aircraft but do when we are out in the field. When I am at the airport and set the pressure to that broadcast in the airport information frequency, ADIS. It is dead on with the field elevation. In the air I have checked it against the altimeter in the plane and they are always very close. Close enough that in an emergency it could be used. If you need barometric pressure and you know the altitude you can work it backwards.
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A Google user
September 5, 2019
Most pressure altimeter apps are made for unskilled plebs and are completely nonfunctional. Ive tried a dozen that lack basic scientific functionality. This simple app is the only one ive yet found that does what a pressure altimeter is supposed to do. A pressure altimeter with an adjustment knob? Woa. Who could have imagined that? Oh wait everyone imagined that, but none of those other worthless apps could figure out the simple process of coding one.
7 people found this review helpful
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A Google user
October 21, 2018
Allows adjustment but not continuously. I'm currently halfway between two adjustment steps in altitude but cannot accurately set that. That said, clearly six or eight feet makes little difference in the grand scheme of things but I'm a stickler for accuracy.
2 people found this review helpful
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