I had a rather embarrassing and amazingly annoying mishap yesterday...
It was my first trip out of the bubble, and I was attempting to get noticed by the Prof so that he'd send me an invite... I plotted a 5400ly outbound course and decided to fly it conventionally rather than using the neutron super-highway (too scary). My ship has a jump range of a little over 50ly and the route had 110 jumps. Stopped off after a few jumps for a final Latte at a mining station the edge of the bubble and then leapt into the unknown...
It was going really quite well... Just one minor mishap along the way (an emergency SC drop leaving me with 99% power plant and AFMU, but otherwise 100% across the board...) Stopped off a few times between sessions (parked on a moon), collected quite a few decent systems scans.. It really was going so well.....
Last night I was running out of RL time and 10 jumps from the end had to park up, I was also a bit tired... Selected a moon, flew an approach that 'felt OK' on the ship handling. Went to 'round out' near the surface to select a landing point, and realised too late the moon was High G. Needless to say, it didn't end up well and I woke up back on the edge of the bubble, 450k lighter (and needing something stronger than a latte when I realised I'd flown just 4911 ly from my career start point, Matet!!!!!!).
Two more jumps......., if only I'd done two more jumps..... Just two.... two.....arrrrggghhh!!!!!
Q1: Where do explorers 'park' between RL sessions. Do you land somewhere?, or do you just come to a stop in deep space and log out???
Q2: The unexpected High-G thing prompted me to reassess what pre-landing checks I do. I didn't see the G listed on the info panel in system map when I selected the moon, but a later test suggested that once I locked it as a destination and its name changed from "Unexplored" to its body designation, then I'd be able to see the surface G - is that the best way to forewarn myself in future?....
It was my first trip out of the bubble, and I was attempting to get noticed by the Prof so that he'd send me an invite... I plotted a 5400ly outbound course and decided to fly it conventionally rather than using the neutron super-highway (too scary). My ship has a jump range of a little over 50ly and the route had 110 jumps. Stopped off after a few jumps for a final Latte at a mining station the edge of the bubble and then leapt into the unknown...
It was going really quite well... Just one minor mishap along the way (an emergency SC drop leaving me with 99% power plant and AFMU, but otherwise 100% across the board...) Stopped off a few times between sessions (parked on a moon), collected quite a few decent systems scans.. It really was going so well.....
Last night I was running out of RL time and 10 jumps from the end had to park up, I was also a bit tired... Selected a moon, flew an approach that 'felt OK' on the ship handling. Went to 'round out' near the surface to select a landing point, and realised too late the moon was High G. Needless to say, it didn't end up well and I woke up back on the edge of the bubble, 450k lighter (and needing something stronger than a latte when I realised I'd flown just 4911 ly from my career start point, Matet!!!!!!).
Two more jumps......., if only I'd done two more jumps..... Just two.... two.....arrrrggghhh!!!!!
Q1: Where do explorers 'park' between RL sessions. Do you land somewhere?, or do you just come to a stop in deep space and log out???
Q2: The unexpected High-G thing prompted me to reassess what pre-landing checks I do. I didn't see the G listed on the info panel in system map when I selected the moon, but a later test suggested that once I locked it as a destination and its name changed from "Unexplored" to its body designation, then I'd be able to see the surface G - is that the best way to forewarn myself in future?....