Full Exo scan bonus?

Is there some sort of bonus for fully scanning a planet? I ask because I often end up with concha, fungoid or frutexa locations designated in the heat map, choose the largest one, fly into the heart of it and spend 45 minutes looking for any one of those things. In that time, I could have found 4 other things on the neighboring body, so wondered if it was more practical to just skip and off to the next one.

I mean, I find FSS works this way i.e. Why DSS a 30-60 body system when you can make more FSS’ng 20-40 other systems in that time the time it takes to fly 250k LS to the next body? Then back another direction 275k LS to the next? Etc.
 
The heatmap is sometimes misleading.
The entire planet is colored blue for one species and there are probably only 4 specimens.
These are then evenly distributed on the sphere.
The time to look for them is too much for me.
 
The gold spot are planet which you must probe with max 2 probes, for iency with just one probe.
Most of the time you must find 4 bio signals on such planet. Within 30min to 45min you will be able to find/collect 3 or 4 bio signals.
 
A blue area of any colour designates an area that can contain the bio. It doesn't tell you exactly where; for that you need to read the codex or simply have experience tell you where each grows.

Personally, I cycle through the filter after scanning, find the smallest areas of blue and fly to the edge of that area. I keep a note of a heading that I know will take me into a second area of larger bio signals; I fly around and land close to bio's without bothering with the SRV and usually find what I'm looking for pretty quickly. Experience tells me Discus grows on rocky edges, but there is probably Fungoida on flatter areas close by and others at the bottom of the ravines. That's 2 or 3. Then with the heading I took before landing, I will fly a few kilometres in that direction until the ground changes, say from rocky to sandy, in which case I know I'm in a different area for different bio's. Going from rocky ravines to flat sand probably means Stratum, Tussock, and Bacteria etc.

Rarely do I need to fly into orbit and down again to complete. You can usually complete all scans by entering just 2 different neighboring areas in my experience, at least in the bubble. Go to the Borfor system, planets 1C and 1D. Shoribelu 5B 5C and 9E as well. IIRC some of them have 8? 9? signals each, should give you plenty of experience for the most common bio's to find. Make a note of where you found each type growing (side of ridges, flat open areas, inside craters or ravines, sandy, rocky, high up or low down etc).

Yes it takes time to learn, but you should eventually get to a point where experience will help you quickly assess where likely areas within a blue area for each bio are. If it takes too long after that, just move on; the money to time ratio isn't worth completing it. Don't feel like you have to rely on the SRV either; nothing wrong with just landing in the ship and disembarking and you are likely to cover the distance required for diversity between the 3 quicker and more definitively than in the SRV.

Again, all of this is just my experience in the bubble, but I've been completing entire 5 signal planets in under an hour and 9 signals in about 1h 30m. But only after knowing where things grow. I should also point out I'm a VR player which makes looking for bio's from the cockpit very easy.
 
That is because it is not a heat map. The missing color graduation should give that away. It is a location map, marking where it is possible for the selected organism to spawn. Nothing more, nothing less.
One thing more: It also marks locations where it is not possible for the selected organism to spawn. So you still have to know about that organisms preferences and can't just rely on the not-heat map.
 
Is there some sort of bonus for fully scanning a planet? I ask because I often end up with concha, fungoid or frutexa locations designated in the heat map, choose the largest one, fly into the heart of it and spend 45 minutes looking for any one of those things. In that time, I could have found 4 other things on the neighboring body, so wondered if it was more practical to just skip and off to the next one.

I mean, I find FSS works this way i.e. Why DSS a 30-60 body system when you can make more FSS’ng 20-40 other systems in that time the time it takes to fly 250k LS to the next body? Then back another direction 275k LS to the next? Etc.

I will usually only fly out and map a body if there is a chance it harbours at least one bio of a value of 10m or more, that with the first discovery bonus of 40m makes flying out, mapping, landing and sampling worthwhile. I will make an exception for bio that aren't currently in my Codex, but that often means not sampling, just pinging with the ship or SRV scanner. For me to sample anything but the most valuable bio when I visit a planet they must be easy to get, for instance Tussock or Aleoida with a range or 150m and a few visible sites from the landing location will often get sampled while I am there getting the valuable bio.

As Felix says, a completionist might get value in the way of satisfaction from fully scanning, mapping and sampling all bio in a system, but budget wise it often makes no sense at all, but it's a personal thing, if that's what they like to do who am I to criticise!
 
I will usually only fly out and map a body if there is a chance it harbours at least one bio of a value of 10m or more, that with the first discovery bonus of 40m makes flying out, mapping, landing and sampling worthwhile. I will make an exception for bio that aren't currently in my Codex, but that often means not sampling, just pinging with the ship or SRV scanner. For me to sample anything but the most valuable bio when I visit a planet they must be easy to get, for instance Tussock or Aleoida with a range or 150m and a few visible sites from the landing location will often get sampled while I am there getting the valuable bio.

As Felix says, a completionist might get value in the way of satisfaction from fully scanning, mapping and sampling all bio in a system, but budget wise it often makes no sense at all, but it's a personal thing, if that's what they like to do who am I to criticise!
Very true, though once you have tens of billions sitting in the account and no sense of urgency driving aimlessly towards the horizon in SRV can be quite relaxing.
 
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