As a licensed pilot and flight engineer i'd like to think I understand a little about thermal dynamics.
For the life of me I can't figure out how I can set in a sweet spot and scoop all day long and not get above 75 but the second I turn tail from that spot to leave the star and start moving away my temp goes way up into the danger zone. I've also noted that once you temp starts going up, you can't stop it. You increase your orbital path on the star and you don't start cooling, your temp still goes up and you start taking damage.
I understand there is no convection cooling in space but the minute you turn your engines to the star or move away from the radiant heat your temp should go down.
I want to see what everybody else think and maybe put this in as a bug report.
For the life of me I can't figure out how I can set in a sweet spot and scoop all day long and not get above 75 but the second I turn tail from that spot to leave the star and start moving away my temp goes way up into the danger zone. I've also noted that once you temp starts going up, you can't stop it. You increase your orbital path on the star and you don't start cooling, your temp still goes up and you start taking damage.
I understand there is no convection cooling in space but the minute you turn your engines to the star or move away from the radiant heat your temp should go down.
I want to see what everybody else think and maybe put this in as a bug report.