About

About this project

Try Your METAR is an independent aviation weather training product built with a simple ambition: make METAR, TAF, and ATIS practice more focused, more usable, and more worth returning to.

Try Your METAR

Independent project, founder-led.

TRY YOUR METAR is not presented as a corporate training machine or a generic content site. It is a focused product created and run independently with the intention of getting one thing right: helping people train aviation weather interpretation more effectively.

I wanted the product to feel useful from the first session, whether someone is building confidence with core METAR decoding or working through more advanced TAF and ATIS-style practice.

Daniel Rosell, founder of Try Your METAR

Why this exists

The starting point for the project.

I started Try Your METAR because I could not find a tool that really helped me train and improve my METAR reading and interpretation skills in a focused, repeatable way.

The goal was to build something practical, accessible, and genuinely useful for people who want short training sessions and clearer feedback instead of generic quiz filler.

Who it is for

The audience the product is built around.

Try Your METAR is built for student pilots, private pilots, ATPL theory students, airline pilots, dispatchers, and aviation enthusiasts who want to improve how they read and interpret aviation weather reports.

The product is meant to stay useful across different experience levels, from people learning the basics of METAR structure to users who want more repetition under time pressure and closer exposure to TAF and ATIS-style interpretation.

Who is behind it

A little more about the builder.

I come from a technical software background and I am building this as an independent project with a strong interest in aviation and training quality.

What matters to me is combining software craftsmanship with aviation learning in a way that feels clear, efficient, and genuinely respectful of how pilots and aviation learners actually study.