You check the weather, see "30% chance of rain", and roll out anyway. Two hours in, on the far side of the loop, the sky opens — and the forecast you read was for your living room, not for the ridge you're now climbing into a headwind.
For a quick spin that's fine. For a three- or four-hour ride it isn't, because the weather you start in is rarely the weather you finish in. Timing a long route is its own skill, and a single forecast for a single place can't do it.
Why one forecast lies to you on a long ride
A normal weather app answers one question: what's it like here, around now. A ride asks a harder one: what's it like everywhere I'm going, at the time I'll get there. Those are very different.
Over a few hours a route can climb out of a mild valley into cold, wet air on an exposed ridge and drop back down to sun. And wind is the sneakiest of all: the tailwind that flatters you on the way out becomes a grinding headwind the moment you turn for home. A point forecast hides every bit of that.
What Ride Radar does differently
Ride Radar is VeloPin's pre-ride weather tool, and it's built around the route rather than a place. Instead of one reading, it walks your whole line and lines the forecast up with your plan:
- Forecast along the route, not one point. Rain, temperature and wind are sampled all the way down your route, so you see the conditions you'll actually cross.
- Timed to your arrival. Every point is matched to your estimated time of arrival at your pace, so km 40 shows the sky as it'll be when you get to km 40 — not right now.
- Real headwind, not just "wind 15 km/h". The wind is projected onto your direction of travel for each segment, so you can see exactly where you'll fight it and where you'll get a push.
- A best-departure window. Ride Radar scores each possible start time by rain and headwind and tells you the calmest one — leave at 8, wait until 10, or go now.
- Daylight built in. Sunrise and sunset are on the timeline, so a late start doesn't quietly turn into a finish in the dark.
How to use it
- Open Ride Radar and load a GPX or pick one of your saved routes — it locks to that exact line.
- Set your start time and pace. Ride Radar fetches the forecast along the route and times it to your ride.
- Read the verdict: the best window to leave, plus the rain, wind and light you'll meet along the way. Nudge the start time and watch the whole ride update.
Try it free: Ride Radar runs a live demo on a sample loop without an account. Running it on your own routes is part of VeloPin Pro.
The takeaway
You can't control the weather, but you can stop being surprised by it. The trick isn't a better single forecast — it's matching the forecast to where you'll be and when. Do that and most "ruined by rain" rides simply move an hour earlier, or turn the loop the other way to ride home on the tailwind. Ride Radar does the matching for you, so the call is easy before you've clipped in.
See your ride's weather before you go
Free live demo · full Ride Radar with Pro · runs in your browser
Open Ride Radar →