First, I checked the forums & couldn't find an answer.
I'm trying to add variability to weather within certain parameters (i.e. to roughly match central Ohio). Weather Control V2 apparently doesn't work in TS2012. The driver command EW Time & Weather doesn't seem to work for AI drivers; for example, Drive to Trackmark "1", WaitForRandom "1-60", Time&Weather = "rain" doesn't work. EW Time & Weather doesn't appear in Session Rules--Driver Setup or Schedule Library--it appears to be an immediate command only, for player controlled trains.
So--is there a workaround for this? Something I haven't thought of?
thank you
More detailed info: weather in Trainz changes too rapidly for my taste; In Ohio we can go days without rain then have an all-day light rain. On a hot summer day rapidly evaporating water from lakes & ponds causes random, short-lived "pop-up" thunderstorms. When a cold front moves through the thunderstorm can last for a couple hours, followed by a half-day rain. Rain is more likely at dawn & dusk than midday. This is what I'm trying to emulate, if possible.
I'm trying to add variability to weather within certain parameters (i.e. to roughly match central Ohio). Weather Control V2 apparently doesn't work in TS2012. The driver command EW Time & Weather doesn't seem to work for AI drivers; for example, Drive to Trackmark "1", WaitForRandom "1-60", Time&Weather = "rain" doesn't work. EW Time & Weather doesn't appear in Session Rules--Driver Setup or Schedule Library--it appears to be an immediate command only, for player controlled trains.
So--is there a workaround for this? Something I haven't thought of?
thank you
More detailed info: weather in Trainz changes too rapidly for my taste; In Ohio we can go days without rain then have an all-day light rain. On a hot summer day rapidly evaporating water from lakes & ponds causes random, short-lived "pop-up" thunderstorms. When a cold front moves through the thunderstorm can last for a couple hours, followed by a half-day rain. Rain is more likely at dawn & dusk than midday. This is what I'm trying to emulate, if possible.