For the last little while I've been annoyed at the inaccuracy in the cloud forecast from Clear Outside. On so many occasions the forecast has been wildly inaccurate. For example, right now it says there should only be 8% cloud cover at my location. When I look outside it's completely overcast.
This has happened so often I've stopped trusting it and just stuck my head out the window.
So, does anyone have an alternative that provides a more accurate forecast of clouds and weather?
Cloud Free Night may have lost the ACCESS model data, but now displays the official Bureau seven-day forecasts, and links to forecasts from OzForecast, Yr, meteoblue and Clear Outside for all the meteogram locations
Cloud free night is still 90% accurate as far as forecasting is concerned even though they lost the access data plus you still get the satellite, radar and weather charts
Your never going to get any higher than 90% , if you do it’s just “lucky forecasting” anyway
Weather is an ever changing phenomena
Cloud free night for me
Cheers
The BOM real time satellite viewer is a great (almost) real time resource as it shows exactly what the cloud cover is up to. You can zoom in and overlay the names of cities so can get a good idea of impending cloud cover, or clearing events, quite easily for your location. Used in tandem with the forecast maps it is very useful.
I use Clear Outside for long term planning (are there any days when it is worth considering in the next 7 days), then Cloud Free Night for shorter term stuff. It's weather after all, difficult to predict .
I also check this for live views of the jetstream and wind at different altitudes. Click on earth for more options, and click on the arrow for it to access your location. You can look at particular times predicted as well. Lots of other info there too if you know how to digest it.
I made the mistake yesterday to check the weather at work and it showed clear all night.
So I set up, had dinner, picked up my daughter from the pool and packed up again.
The location I checked was in the Wheatbelt, not Perth. :-)