One trip question.

Lestat

Banned
Question I have for you all. What is your most system explored on one trip. How long did it take. Did you explore All system or did you scan the sun and jump.

My goal on this trip is 6,000 to 10,000 system before heading back to the bubble or until I do something really dumb. But I like to hear your longest trips. I will scan all Sttars, Planets, Moons.
 
Completely scanning all bodies in 6k+ systems...see you back in the bubble when 4.3 drops [haha]

First things first...make sure you have fun doing what you are doing, and set a fun goal for yourself as the only right way to explore is the way that is enjoyable to you.

The most systems I visited in a single trip was somewhere around 3,000. I was specifically looking for terraformables, so I jumped in, honked, scanned main star while looking at system map, and only went to bodies I though were likely terraformables. The trip took me about a month, and I left the majority of scannable bodies unscanned.
 
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Lestat

Banned
Lucky for me Straha20. If I get bored I can switch to my other account that in the Bubble. So I not stuck just exploring.
 
Lucky for me Straha20. If I get bored I can switch to my other account that in the Bubble. So I not stuck just exploring.

Thats a good way to avoid bordem however I'll wager you'll wont be scanning everything as you get deeper into the trip.

Space madness will kick in [haha]

Straha is right though you gotta do what you enjoy doing. Everyone's different.

My trip is going to be 18 months with a goal of 20k systems. I tend to scan a lot but I have to pace myself so I'll be getting back on time. I'll be skipping more scans that I'd normally do.

As of tomorrow I'll have 5 months to go.

Then I'll RP a 6 month repair and outfit for my asp.

In those 6 months I'll go back out on a Nebula tour in a Imp. courier.

CMDR Tootiny
 
My very first trip I started scanning everything (except belt clusters). I mean every thing. I'd fly 300kls to scan a brown dwarf, I'd often log on for a 2-3hr session and jump 4 or 5 times.

After 4 months I'd only managed a few hundred systems. So I stopped that.

I've been out for 15 and a bit months on this trip and have visited 23,395 systems so far. If I was still scanning everything that would have taken me at least 15 and a bit years. I always scan the jump in star, ELW, AW, WW, likely CFT and things that I'm flying up to because they look pretty. Every now and again I scan everything for old time's sake and if it's a partially tagged system I'll always scan something that isn't tagged. (Occasionally I scan things because I'm trying to test a change to ED Discovery but that's a special case that probably won't apply.)
 
I just got back after a 10 month+ trip.

1.6 mill ly and 70k+ systems. That's by-the-by, but I thought I'd give you some stats & info I got out of it.

It takes 45 secs per jump MINIMUM just honking the system and going to the next one. Add in fuel scoopping (I used an Asp with 6B fuel scoop) and plotting next 1k jump, you can expect a maximum of 1 jump per minute if you don't scan any bodies. Anything else you do on top of that will naturally reduce the quantity of systems you can do in a given timespan. Scanning profitable bodies only, scooping, plotting new 1k courses, I averaged somewhere around 40 to 50 systems per hour. If your game time is limited, you may want to use "45 jumps per hour" to calculate your time arriving back. You can get 80 per hour if you use economic route and don't fuel scoop or scan anything. You will discover your own rhythm, so don't get bogged down in trying too hard.

For scanning, I only scanned Water, Ammonia and Earth-Like Worlds within systems, apart from a few random others along the way. I scanned Neutron Stars and Black Holes when I found them - planned or by accident - but Neutrons have changed since 2.2 so you may want to skip those if you feel the risk is too great on a long haul trip. I scanned all mine pre 2.2 and, because I was carrying nearly 1.5 billion credits of data, I stopped targetting them. Good CR though. 40k CR and + 50% if you are first discoverer at roughly 60 per hour can be quite profitable.

I generally never went after anything over 2k ls away - which is about 2 minutes travel and scan time. It depended on my mood and how profitable it would be whether I went any further. Eg, travelling 30k ls to get 4 Water Worlds.

Heat. It is your enemy. Be careful. It is an enemy that comes a close second to stupidity. Stupidity and heat are the only things that can cause you harm out there. I managed to get back with 81% hull.

Trying to get your fuel scoop to max every time is not necessary and can lead to heat issues if you aren't careful. On a 752 fuel scoop, I generally went for max of 740. Scooping every star vs scooping when tank drained is slighly slower. Always leave 1 jump in your tanks for emergecies. My Asp could do 7 max jumps, so I scooped every 6 when I could. Trying to max your fuel scoop every time is unwise.

Fastest route will cover more distance, of course , but will require more fuel scoops along the way - economic routes can sometimes cover 200+ systems and no need to fuel scoop along the way.

In the same amount of game time, you can either scan lots of bodies and do that in fewer systems or scan only selected and profitable bodies in systems and do more systems. Scanning 30 moons in a system over, say 25 minutes is time not well spent. The CR is very low for moons and in the same time you could have jumped to 20+ more systems and found profitable bodies to scan in those systems.

I averaged nearly 22k CR per system in my run. About 925 CR per ly. Here's a link to a post with the spreadsheet of my journey if it helps you. https://forums.frontier.co.uk/showt...p-1-ASP-1-careful-owner?p=4881783#post4881783

Good luck, Commander

Madriax
 
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Since I have "distance" rather than "number of systems scanned" as my primary measurement of progress, I don't really know how many systems I've scanned on my current trip, which is now easily the longest and farthest I have been on so far. I don't think I took a screenshot of the "number of systems visited" stats page before I left.

But my scanning mode is pretty much the same as Iain's. Scan all (or most) of the interesting/valuable planets, skip the iceballs/tiny moons unless I'm already stopping or passing within scan range.

Suppose I jump into a "typical" G or F class star system: bunch of terrestrials near the Sun, bunch of gas giants further out. I'll scan any terrestrials within immediate scan range of the jump-in point (since they're likeliest to be Metal-Rich), then skip out to any ELWs, WWs or terrestrials in my guesstimate of the Terraformable Zone, and any moons those worlds I stop at might have. If there are any Water Worlds, Ammonia Worlds or Class II giants further out, I'll do those too. I'll only zoom in close for screenshots if it's an ELW, has weird orbital geometry or is otherwise extraordinary. Otherwise, it's on to the next system.

I never completely scan an entire system any more, unless it's a really simple system where everything is both valuable and easily scanned. I always like to leave something (preferably something more valuable than a bunch of tiny ice moons) for those who might come behind, so that they can say "Sapyx was here first, but I was here too".
 
6,711 and counting. Been out since the end of February but I also took a 7 month break so call it 4 months?

I am actually only 2,500 LY away from bubble, going to get home late tonight or tomorrow some time.

I vary between scanning lots of objects or honking and scooping depending on my mood. I never scan whole systems, never scan ice balls, very rarely scan gas giant moons that are not obviously a valuable planet type, or very far from jump in gas giants. I will chase down an ELW or WW or AW no matter how far away from jump in it is.

I very much enjoy space photography so I try to nab any interesting screenies I can, that takes up some time too.

I also don't always track the most direct route, lots of zig zags if I see interesting objects like Blue Supergiants, or Black Holes, Wolf Rayet stars, and O-star clusters.
 
Heat. It is your enemy. Be careful. It is an enemy that comes a close second to stupidity. Stupidity and heat are the only things that can cause you harm out there. I managed to get back with 81% hull.

It's all too easy to get complacent. If you've been jonking your way somewhere and you've hit M and K-type stars for the last 10 systems then you know the drill - point your nose at the horizon, honk, scoop, round the curve of the star, wait for the scoop to disengage and then frameshift to the next system. You can do it in your sleep.

And then you hit a type-Y. Innocuous looking things, except their horizon line is ludicrously high above their surface, and before you know it you've crash-stopped and suffered module damage.

True, you can filter them off (I assume) but if you fly raw like I do then they can come as a nasty shock.

I personally scoop every scoopable, but I don't obsess over topping the tanks full unless I'm under half. Whatever I get from rounding the curve is fine.
 
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6,711 and counting. Been out since the end of February but I also took a 7 month break so call it 4 months?

I am actually only 2,500 LY away from bubble, going to get home late tonight or tomorrow some time.

I vary between scanning lots of objects or honking and scooping depending on my mood. I never scan whole systems, never scan ice balls, very rarely scan gas giant moons that are not obviously a valuable planet type, or very far from jump in gas giants.
I will chase down an ELW or WW or AW no matter how far away from jump in it is.
I very much enjoy space photography so I try to nab any interesting screenies I can, that takes up some time too.

I also don't always track the most direct route, lots of zig zags if I see interesting objects like Blue Supergiants, or Black Holes, Wolf Rayet stars, and O-star clusters.

See I used to be that way.. An ELW yes but not for a WW or AW. not anymore.
My thing now is crossing stuff off my bucket list.
For example:
Find an ELW orbiting a class A0 / A1 / A2 / A3 / A4 -- Any B star. / T-tauri 0-9 {I have a 6 :) } / L0-L9 / M1 / M2 / M4 / M5 / M7 / my weird nemesis.. a G3 / and then the really weird stuff that does exist:
ELW orbiting a stand alone:
Carbon star
Herbig star
Black hole
White Dwarf
 
It's all too easy to get complacent. If you've been jonking your way somewhere and you've hit M and K-type stars for the last 10 systems then you know the drill - point your nose at the horizon, honk, scoop, round the curve of the star, wait for the scoop to disengage and then frameshift to the next system. You can do it in your sleep.

And then you hit a type-Y. Innocuous looking things, except their horizon line is ludicrously high above their surface, and before you know it you've crash-stopped and suffered module damage.

True, you can filter them off (I assume) but if you fly raw like I do then they can come as a nasty shock.

I personally scoop every scoopable, but I don't obsess over topping the tanks full unless I'm under half. Whatever I get from rounding the curve is fine.

And again I too did this. You will grow out of it, on a long trip that will change even with long jumps. now I'll go down to 1/4 tank and then top off. I can go hundreds of LY's with manual jumping without ever worrying about fuel.

My hull is at 81%
half of that damage was due to scooping errors. the rest was Neutron & White dwarf nastiness. Add in 1 face plant into a planet and a mix up with some crazy invisible rings.
I went from July 22 to Oct 21 without a scratch. So I haven't hurt my hull since Oct 21st.
You learn and get better. I never use orbit lines either.
 

Jon474

Banned
I started off scanning everything but very nearly lost my mind doing so!

Now, I look for planets of interest to me...blue clouds on GGs, planets with an axial tilt of 90 degrees, I love ice worlds and ringed ones doubly so, landables with volcanism, GG Bingo - one of each of the five Sudarsky Classes in a single system, extra points if they line up in order I to V. Sometimes I scan the penultimate body in a system regardless of size, type or distance from the Primary. Sometimes the nearest and furthest bodies...but not the star.

You get the idea, I am sure...have fun but don't be bound to a single plan. Switch it about regularly.

Fuelling becomes automatic, I agree and fear of damage fades with every LY travelled. I am down to 84% hull after 75K LY - scooping x 4, too fast into orbital cruise x 5, rings x 3, inexplicably smacked into a non-landable at speed. The first few times I thought about turning back but no longer.

Flying happily
Jon
Type-6 Explorer
 
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Question I have for you all. What is your most system explored on one trip. How long did it take. Did you explore All system or did you scan the sun and jump.

My goal on this trip is 6,000 to 10,000 system before heading back to the bubble or until I do something really dumb. But I like to hear your longest trips. I will scan all Sttars, Planets, Moons.

If you visit 10000 systems and scan every sun moon and planet you're going to be out in the black a very very long time :)

Frawd
 
See I used to be that way.. An ELW yes but not for a WW or AW. not anymore.
My thing now is crossing stuff off my bucket list.
For example:
Find an ELW orbiting a class A0 / A1 / A2 / A3 / A4 -- Any B star. / T-tauri 0-9 {I have a 6 :) } / L0-L9 / M1 / M2 / M4 / M5 / M7 / my weird nemesis.. a G3 / and then the really weird stuff that does exist:
ELW orbiting a stand alone:
Carbon star
Herbig star
Black hole
White Dwarf

I am 1200 LY away from having a tag on an ELW orbiting a Herbig.
 
YES! I knew they were out there. You've given me a lift in spirit!!
Cant rep you anymore SpaceMonkeyz.

To Give You Hope:

Y8z1Hkr.jpg

qBFmQVf.jpg



Sadly @ 55ls from a Herbig with 5 solar masses, that poor ELW is doomed, sooner rather than later.

One more shot from when I visited it:

Zt4w750.jpg
 
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