Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Midwestern Weather Network (MWWN) is a network of private internet-connected weather stations across the U.S. Midwest, covering states such as Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, and Ohio. It is more like a community-run Mesonet-style weather observation aggregator than a commercial weather app: it collects current weather data from member stations and displays it centrally on maps and in tables.
The site provides real-time observation metrics including temperature, dew point, humidity, wind speed, gusts, today’s rainfall, barometric pressure and trend, and last update time. It also supports unit switching for °C/°F, km/h, mph, m/s, kts, mm/in, and hPa/inHg/mb. Some stations also include WebCam and Lightning information. The pages list many links to regional weather networks, including related networks in North America, Europe, Australia, New Zealand, Namibia, and more, making it convenient for weather enthusiasts to browse across regions.
No commercial pricing is shown on the public pages. The site explicitly states that users who own a qualifying personal weather station website and run software such as Weather Display, VWS, Cumulus, Meteobridge, or WeatherLink can apply to join the network for free. As such, it is mainly a public-interest/community collaboration model.
The main advantage is that station locations are closer to local communities, which may help supplement gaps in official weather station coverage. The tables include update times and pressure trends, making them fairly practical, and the requirements for joining are relatively friendly. The drawbacks are also clear: the page design is fairly old-school, with limited interactivity; the data depends on maintenance and calibration by individual station owners; and the footer warns that it should not be used for important decisions that could affect personal or property safety. We did not see an official API, mobile app, or Chinese-language support.
It is suitable for U.S. Midwest residents, weather enthusiasts, personal weather station owners, and users who want to quickly check real-time conditions from multiple local stations. It is less suitable for users who need authoritative alerts, commercial-grade SLAs, a unified global data API, or a localized Chinese-language experience.
Given the nature of the site, it appears to be a standard overseas weather information site, with no login, payment, or sensitive functions involved, and it can usually be accessed directly. However, its data is mainly focused on the U.S. Midwest, so Chinese users are more likely to use it for checking overseas weather or studying community-run weather networks.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on midwesternweather.net official site.
midwesternweather.net is an United States Lookups provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 4.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach midwesternweather.net directly.