A Web Coverage Service (WCS) differs greatly in use case from the other services, but it behaves very similarly. The goal of WCS is to allow users to extract a region of interest from a large raster data that is hosted remotely. Unlike a WMS or Tiled set, WCS is a clip of the original data in full resolution and usually in the original projection. This format is ideal if you need the raster data for analysis purposes and not just visualization.
For this recipe, you need a WCS to connect to. Check with your data providers to see whether they offer WCS. For this recipe, we can use the OpenGeo Geoserver Demo site at http://demo.opengeo.org/geoserver/web/.


If you zoom in to the level of a US State or a European country, you will see the image start to pixelate. Blue Marble is a low resolution image put together by NASA that roughly shows what the whole world looks like from space, cloud free. It is meant as a general view of the whole world and does not contain fine details.
WCS, like other web services, sends a bounding box request to the server, which in turn delivers the raster data to QGIS. Unlike WMS, no rendering is done on the server side, the raw original raster data is sent. This could mean the following:
Keep in mind that requesting the full extent of a high resolution raster will result in a large amount of data transfer. This is unlike Tiles or WMS, which at most return the exact number of pixels in the viewable area at the resolution that is requested.