Nothing much to report aside from that which is below in the stats, and some pretty screenshots!
Sagittarius A* – 10th Nov 3302 (Day 4)
Nothing much to report!
Some progress towards waypoint 2, but route planning says 48 jumps to go.
Sagittarius A* – 8th Nov 3302 (Day 3)
Not a particularly long session tonight, as my thoughts were elsewhere with the current faction issues in the Sol system.
Oh well, at least out here I get away from it all, and get to see sights like this:
There’s no shortage of impressively complex systems out here though, such has this system:
And a lot of volcanism…. ok, I’ll admit it, this planet is almost entirely a ball of lava.
Apart from one minor overheating incident which has damaged some modules, including my AFMU, not too much, other than the notable point that I have reached Waypoint 1!
Sagittarius A* – 7th Nov 3302 (Day 2)
I’ve been thinking of rules for exploration since my most recent… mishap. I think I’m gonna start with an obvious one – in fact I get the feeling these are all going to be obvious things to those not suffering the effects of space madness.
- Don’t explore without your shield.
I mean, for the most part it’s probably fine to fly without a shield, but the point here is don’t land without a shield. Especially on high gravity worlds. The only reason for shutting off your shield is power conservation, and to me this means you’re doing one of two things
- Sitting still for a while, be it AFK or wanting screenshots of ice
- Running really low in fuel
In the first case, you’re gonna be starting up modules again anyway. In the second case you should have planned it better, and now v2.2 is out there’s not much of an excuse as you can exclude T Tauri and other non-main-sequence stars from your route plotting.
For pure efficiency’s sake, my weapons, cargo scoop, PVH and AFMU are all disabled, as none of those perform any role in keeping me safe out in deep space.
Having said that, let’s see how many times I “bellyflop a planet like a skrub”, as CMDR Braxton Doyle oh so eloquently described yesterday’s main event. Yes, I’m departing Colonia for Sgr A* again. I’m hoping I at least make it to Waypoint 1 this time, also notably a different Waypoint 1, as I’ve decided to use CMDR Braxton Doyle’s instead as it’s a little closer.
I found this pair of a pair of planets which I found interesting – I’ve seen this with stars before but not with planets – a pair of a pair:
I’ve also found this system which looks interesting, so I took a wonder around to see what the sights to see where, getting surface scans of everything I could.
I’m glad I did come looking, since I’ve found a water world – Eol Prou KW-M d7-1763 6 – but it has an Ammonia atmosphere!? I’m guessing this will answer some of the questions raised by CMDR Braxton Doyle and I on our way out to Jaques.
I found a few systems I thought were worth taking a look at, but nothing really that noteworthy.
I’m parking up for the night on Eoch Pruae AE-W c16-13 A 1 a, some 23 jumps from Waypoint 1. A 1 is a gas giant with water-based life, which I thought was quite neat. The planet I’m actually on, A 1 a is just the standard Icy Body, but it does appear to have deposits of Vanadium, which I’m temoted to get, but not tonight.I also want to find one of the water geysers that are reported to exist on this planet, though taking a ride in one in an SRV might just end badly, especially since this planet only has 0.08G gravity (smooth landing, no belly flops this time!)
Sagittarius A* – 6th Nov 3302
Today I decided to depart for Sgr A*!
Before I left, I collected the money I was owed for taking part in the last community goal – mining Palladium for Jaques. Apart from the money I got from selling said Palladium, I got a nice little packet of money for my troubles too!
And so, I left Colonia, leaving Spirit behind in storage at Jaques, maybe one day I’ll return.
The session started out quite well – taking a lot of scans of the systems I was passing through.
Then I discovered this interesting system, which had this every tempting planet on it, including Geysers. I thought I’d quickly run down and land to see what all the fuss was about.
… and that’s where the good fortune stopped. I’d disabled my shield to save a bit of fuel, and I hadn’t noticed the high 2.5G gravity, so when I boosted down at about 180m/s about 3km above the surface, my thrusters just couldn’t cope with the gravity and reducing my velocity.
Crunch.
I hit the ground.
Hard.
The initial impact took my hull down to around 72%, but my nose was on the ground, rear skywards. By the time I’d landed properly on my landing gear, (at which point my shield finally decided it could help – too late…), my hull was down to 67% – a third gone from a single landing.
A brief consideration on the matter, and the point that I was only 22 jumps from the nearest starport lead me to the obvious conclusion that I ought to go and repair my ship before continuing.
I didn’t expect to be back so soon.
It feels like I’ve been bitten by something scary, turned tail and run away back home.
Ach, well, at least my ship is parked plugged in to external power, and now back up to full health, and I’ve managed to sell a little bit of exporation data at the same time!
So, 43 jumps made, zero progress towards my target. One (major) incident. Let’s hope my luck is better next time!
Sagittarius A*
So, I’m planning to return to the Bubble, and look into some of these passenger missions. Before I leave for the bubble proper though, I’m looking to take a “quick” trip out to Sagittarius A* – a supermassive black hole at the centre of the galaxy – before heading back.
As opposed to my trip out to Jaques, I’m not taking anything home with me, so there’s no pesky mugs to take care of, just Curiosity and myself in the void. I have managed to soup up Curiosity somewhat, so I’ll have a slightly longer jump range (17.58 – unless I somehow manage to make it better still) and be better equipped as an exploration ship now, though nowhere near as good as what I could get in an Anaconda, Diamondback Explorer or Asp Explorer. I’m also not aiming for range this time around, but again aiming to do this as an exploration mission, taking my time to pick up as much exploration data as I can on this route. I’ll be following the same waypoint-plotting technique as described when I overtook CMDR Braxton Doyle on our trip out to Jaques.
Like last time, this is a working document, so expect this to change here and there as I prepare to depart, travel, and arrive.
I believe CMDR Braxton Doyle will be following a similar route to me, though while I plan on not using Neutron Stars to boost my travel speed, I think he may choose to do so.
The rough route plan is this:
In green is the rough route I’ve already completed. In orange is my planned route – back to the bubble via Sag A*. Below is the standard table showing the route I’m actually taking, waypoint by waypoint. These will be plotted as time goes on.
Jaques – 18th Oct 3302 (Day 21)
JAQUES OR BUST!
Again. Thankfully, the local interface to my seemingly remotely piloted ship has been a lot more stable today, so I wasn’t needing to reconnect every second jump like I was at points yesterday.
On the way I passed a beautiful L-class brown dwarf
This was followed by one of the first peeks at the Colonia Nebula:
Space is confusing though, as the stars just suddenly… stop.
As I slowly continued, I could see the Colonia Nebula getting bigger in my field of vision as I drew closer and closer to it.
Alas, I finally made it to one jump to go, and decided to call it a night.
Wait, who am I kidding, it’s ONE JUMP TO GO!
So I arrived in the system, found Jaques, and proceeded to approach the station, I managed to get docking permission, and just about set down on the pad.
And then….
At least I’ve arrived.
After reconnecting back up to my ship, I repaired my ship, restocked it, sold my cargo and exploration data.
Eleven tons of Hutton Mugs have travelled over twenty-two thousand light years to be here, and all they get is 16,759/ton? That’s still over 180k credits profit though, given they’re cheap as chips at Hutton Orbital.
Balance | 345,032 | |
Repair cost | (2,260) | 342,772 |
Restock cost | (1,232) | 341,540 |
Hutton Mugs | 180,521 | 522,061 |
Mossianite | 11,736 | 533,797 |
I sold 1,596 bits of exploration data, worth a total of 12,337,830 credits, split over 33 pages, averaging to around 7,730 credits per bit of data.
Income per page | Unsellable data (too close; carries over) | Sold on this page | Avg income per item |
---|---|---|---|
547,727 | – | 50 | 10,954.54 |
302,961 | – | 50 | 6,059.22 |
311,714 | – | 50 | 6,234.28 |
466,274 | – | 50 | 9,325.48 |
583,735 | – | 50 | 11,674.70 |
460,049 | – | 50 | 9,200.98 |
306,713 | – | 50 | 6,134.26 |
540,580 | – | 50 | 10,811.60 |
407,844 | – | 50 | 8,156.88 |
195,614 | 1 | 49 | 3,992.12 |
296,218 | 1 | 49 | 6,045.27 |
426,700 | 1 | 49 | 8,708.16 |
476,212 | 1 | 49 | 9,718.61 |
470,292 | 1 | 49 | 9,597.80 |
401,666 | 1 | 49 | 8,197.27 |
395,782 | 1 | 49 | 8,077.18 |
320,651 | 1 | 49 | 6,543.90 |
379,294 | 1 | 49 | 7,740.69 |
325,276 | 1 | 49 | 6,638.29 |
430,627 | 1 | 49 | 8,788.31 |
410,520 | 1 | 49 | 8,377.96 |
346,837 | 1 | 49 | 7,078.31 |
415,685 | 1 | 49 | 8,483.37 |
351,214 | 1 | 49 | 7,167.63 |
276,369 | 1 | 49 | 5,640.18 |
332,485 | 1 | 49 | 6,785.41 |
378,474 | 1 | 49 | 7,723.96 |
331,186 | 2 | 48 | 6,899.71 |
315,687 | 2 | 48 | 6,576.81 |
301,013 | 2 | 48 | 6,271.10 |
386,762 | 2 | 48 | 8,057.54 |
307,249 | 2 | 48 | 6,401.02 |
138,420 | 2 | 24 | 5,767.50 |
12,337,830 | 1,596 | 7,730.47 |
And so, an update on my financials:
Balance | 533,797 | |
Exploration data | 12,337,830 | 12,871,627 |
First discovery bonuses | 328,407 | 13,200,034 |
In addition, I ranked up to Pathfinder!
There’s a large part of me that doesn’t want to do any more exploration now, as I have Curiosity and Opportunity as my ships, and Pathfinder as my exploration rank…
That’s all for now, I’ll probably summarize everything tomorrow in a new post, but I FINALLY MADE IT!