July 13, 20169 yr Correct. That is why it's called "connector". It connects FSGRW (or X-Plane's own real weather) to SMP. You may check the manual here: http://www.x-aviation.com/downloads/RealWeatherConnector.pdf Strange that doesn't make much sense to release SMP only to find out it doesn't even depict the actual weather from XP's built in weather system. So SMP alone is basically random clouds that look pretty in the sky? Didn't know we need a middle man to connect the 2 in order to have SMP represent the actual weather data from XP or any 3rd weather program such as FSGRW. ASUS ROG Maximus Hero XII ▪︎ Intel i9-10900K ▪︎ NVIDIA RTX 3090 FE ▪︎ 64GB Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro ▪︎ Windows 10 Pro (21H1) ▪︎ Samsung 970 EVO Pro 1TB NVME SSD (OS Drive) ▪︎ Samsung 860 EVO 2TB SATA SSD ▪︎ Seagate 4TB SATA HDD ▪︎ Corsair RMx 850W PSU
July 13, 20169 yr Author Strange that doesn't make much sense to release SMP only to find out it doesn't even depict the actual weather from XP's built in weather system. So SMP alone is basically random clouds that look pretty in the sky? Didn't know we need a middle man to connect the 2 in order to have SMP represent the actual weather data from XP or any 3rd weather program such as FSGRW. Well you do get a representation of real weather, it's just not as advanced as when using RWC. It is always around you, as opposed to RWC, which realistically positions weather fronts, enabling you to fly in and out of them. Don't worry, once you have RWC in place, you never have to worry about weather again, it just clicks. - Currently giving X-Plane 12.10 a spin on Shadow PC. 10 years with X-Plane now, since 10.20
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