Did some missions and have some tip off missions, they give the POI in Latitude and longitude and was wondering where i can find my position on a planets surface.
Thanks for a response
Thanks for a response
I know about the lines on our planet and know how to check lat and longitude, is the latitude and longitude the two numbers about the gravity on our HUD?
just was wondering how to know my current position
Set your compass to 0 when you get on the planet. This aligns you to North, 180 points South. This moves your latitude. Turning so the compass points to 90 or 270 points East or West and will move your longitude indicator. Find your first coordinate, the latitude, then stop movement and point East or West and find your longitude coordinate. This works for me. Stay approx 1 km from the planet surface in level flight. To find things faster do it in Orbital Cruise. You'll note that some of your coord are a negative number. The longitude numbers run from -180 to 180. The Latitude run from -90 to 90. To get a perspective, look at a map of our world. See the lines that run North to South and East to West. Apply this perspective to your POI's coord.
Painfully obvious we needed the ability to flag a coordinate on a surface when Horizons landed, more painful is the thought we might not get that ability. Finding cords on the surface is not "hard" per se, but a giant PITA that is pointless. I can navigate 65k LYs across the galaxy but can't set a flag to a set of coords on a rocky moon.
Painfully obvious we needed the ability to flag a coordinate on a surface when Horizons landed, more painful is the thought we might not get that ability. Finding cords on the surface is not "hard" per se, but a giant PITA that is pointless. I can navigate 65k LYs across the galaxy but can't set a flag to a set of coords on a rocky moon.
Painfully obvious we needed the ability to flag a coordinate on a surface when Horizons landed, more painful is the thought we might not get that ability. Finding cords on the surface is not "hard" per se, but a giant PITA that is pointless. I can navigate 65k LYs across the galaxy but can't set a flag to a set of coords on a rocky moon.
Why? I would have thought it painfully obvious that you should be able to follow a compass heading or navigate to simple coordinates. School children have been doing it for decades in orienteering.
Why? I would have thought it painfully obvious that you should be able to follow a compass heading or navigate to simple coordinates. School children have been doing it for decades in orienteering.
Painfully obvious we needed the ability to flag a coordinate on a surface when Horizons landed, more painful is the thought we might not get that ability. Finding cords on the surface is not "hard" per se, but a giant PITA that is pointless. I can navigate 65k LYs across the galaxy but can't set a flag to a set of coords on a rocky moon.