Visualizing METAR data on a Raspberry Pi with LEDs.
Project description
About
Inspired by some DIY projects, this script allows you to quickly discern weather conditions by changing the colors of LEDs to reflect the current METAR information. You will need a Raspberry Pi, some WS281X LEDs, and the four letter designators of the airports you are interested in.
This code assumes you’ve connected to GPIO 18 (PWM0) and have added blacklist snd_bcm2835 to the /etc/modprobe.d/snd-blacklist.conf file.
Don’t want to DIY it? This is the code that powers the Aviation Weather Maps products. Enjoy a premade product, or continue reading and happy tinkering!
Install
sudo su apt install python3-venv python3 -m venv /opt/rpi_metar source /opt/rpi_metar/bin/activate pip install rpi_metar
Configuration
You need to tell rpi_metar which LEDs correspond to which airports. You may do this by creating the /etc/rpi_metar.conf file. There must be an [airports] section where the airport codes are assigned to LEDs. For example:
[airports] KDEN = 0 KBOS = 1
The LED indexes can be skipped and do not need to be continuous. If you don’t have an LED associated with an airport, it does not need to be entered.
The behavior of the program can be tweaked by including a settings section in the configuration file. These configuration values can be set:
Option |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
brightness |
128 |
An integer (from 0 to 255) controlling the intensity of the LEDs appear. In a well lit room, 75 or 85 are recommended. In a bright room, try 128. |
disable_gamma |
False |
A boolean that will allow you to disable the gamma correction. You may need this if using LEDs from different manufacturers / batches in a single run. |
do_fade |
True |
A boolean controlling whether or not stations will fade into their new color during a transition. If False, they will just abruptly change colors. |
lightning |
True |
A boolean that controls if thunderstorm conditions should be visually indicated. They will appear as short blinks of white before going back to the station’s original color. |
lightning_dura tion |
1.0 |
A float controlling how long a station blinks white before returning to its original color. |
max_wind |
30 |
An integer that sets the threshold for max wind speed in knots. Any steady or gusting winds above this value will result in yellow blinking lights. |
metar_refresh_rate |
5 |
An integer that controls how frequently (in minutes) the METAR information is polled. |
papertrail |
True |
A boolean controlling if logs are sent to a centralized system. Only METAR information and processing results are logged. |
wind |
True |
A boolean that controls if high wind speeds should be visually indicated. They will appear as short blinks of yellow before going back to the station’s original color. |
wind_duration |
1.0 |
A float controlling how long a station blinks yellow before returning to its original color. |
unknown_off |
True |
A boolean that controls whether or not stations that are not reporting data will just turn off. If set to False, after three attempts (during which time they appear as yellow), they will instead turn to orange. |
For example, to reduce the brightness of the LEDs:
[settings] brightness = 85
Autostart
Create the /etc/systemd/system/rpi_metar.service file with the following contents:
[Unit] Description=METAR Display [Service] ExecStart=/opt/rpi_metar/bin/rpi_metar User=root Group=root Restart=always [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target
Make systemd aware of the changes:
systemctl daemon-reload
Make sure it’s set to run at boot:
systemctl enable rpi_metar
Start the service:
systemctl start rpi_metar
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