by J G Parker » Wed May 28, 2003 7:49 pm
I got wxRE about a week ago, and have been experimenting with it. I toyed with getting FSMeteo (which I had a few years ago and liked) but went with wxRE because it supplied visual effects (clouds, storms, etc.) to replace the default ones. Also it has turbulance effects and good TI wake effects. Otherwise, like FSMeteo, it supplied live weather, which was important to me. So...
I really like it. The visual effects are sensational (no more magical cloud appearances, more realistic looking T-storms, winds aloft, etc.) and it does a wonderful job of updating my weather to real world conditions as I fly. There is a neat 'briefing' feature that allows you to input the ICAOs of departure and destination, get the current weather and winds aloft, and plan accordingly. Once you do this, wxRE locks in on your destination and scrolls weather updates for the location across your screen from time to time. There is also a voice feature, which is something like the ATIS default feature in MS2k2. It can be annoying tho, because it repeats 3-4 times before falling silent and I can turn it off (I heard you already!). Two annoyances: 1. You have to know how to decode METARS to interpret the flight planning briefing output (but not the local weather, which is read to you). I read a small tutorial I found on the web. 2. The server that updates the weather can be slow at peak times, and may have to retry. This are really trivial tho. On the whole, it has really been fun. You can run it as a stand alone also, and I use it to check the actual weather (I live near an airport) sometimes for fun. Nice manual too, very helpful with a general tutorial on weather as well as installation instructions, etc.
NOTE: I purchased it directly from their site and saved 15$ US over what re-sellers were charging. The transaction went smoothly.
NOTE NOTE: It IS possible that MS will fix things in FS2k4, but I'm betting they won't enhance the clouds and weather enough to make me feel bad about the $20 I spent on this.