how many galactic records have you got?

Hi all,

How many Galactic records have you got and do you keep records so you can check when you get back from a trip?
I've got 3 (although I did have a couple more but they've been broken).

-System with most ringed stellar bodies (7)
-Largest water world (25,755 km)
-Oldest Neutron Star (13,063 million years)

Commander Johnny Frost
 
Many and more, although most of them are "closest to sagittarius a*" and unbeatable unless the galaxy is modified in some patch.

Quick glance at the UC site reveals multiple pages of records, in addition I should have at least one ring record (thinnest single ring) in the old googledoc guidebook

Generally I post record candidates during the trip, while I'm still in the field.

ps. YES GOD YES (related to this thread) (I just found these while replying to this)
 
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According to www.elitegalaxyonline.com i hold as many as 108 records :O:D
This number is surprising even to myself and seems a bit inflated. My most valued record - the largest procedure generated object (and rarest IMO) ever reported - is not submitted yet. Will submit after i return to Bubble
 
According to www.elitegalaxyonline.com i hold as many as 108 records :O:D
This number is surprising even to myself and seems a bit inflated. My most valued record - the largest procedure generated object (and rarest IMO) ever reported - is not submitted yet. Will submit after i return to Bubble

omg 108, good job Commander, there was me feeling proud of just 3!!
 
Hmm I wonder if I still have any records at elite galaxy online... probably not. I posted some pretty regular looking systems there when the site launched.
 
These websites are not recognised by FD as official records, not surprising considering 1,000s of commanders who may have brocken all the records on those websites, just can not be bothered to tell any one.

Only FD knows.
 
These websites are not recognised by FD as official records, not surprising considering 1,000s of commanders who may have brocken all the records on those websites, just can not be bothered to tell any one.

Only FD knows.

Well, d'uh. Naturally so. As long as FD doesn't supply a record keeping initiative of their liking, the community creates their own. As long as there's no official FD system in place, these are the best we have.
 
These websites are not recognised by FD as official records, not surprising considering 1,000s of commanders who may have brocken all the records on those websites, just can not be bothered to tell any one.

Only FD knows.

Yes. But FD too cant be bothered to tell anyone. I think it is a crying shame that a single cmdr (Wolzan) was able to create such sophisticated site for free in their spare time while FD with all the professional devs they got were unable to implement even a most basic record tracking system.
So basically these sites are not perfect but still much better that the big nothing we get from FD.

Edit: Kalpa, you were a bit faster than me :)
 
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I've had a couple.... for a short while. I remember having closest ELW to Sag A*, but that got beaten within a day or two. I'm not to interested in being the biggest or best.
 
I claim this one

Most number of consecutive M class stars orbited by dull, boring lumps of ice
: Four billion nine hundred and twenty two million, four hundred and thirty two thousand, nine hundred and four and still counting.
 
Records? I dunno, several dozen and that's before you start counting the number of different variations of individual files, plus there are lots of duplicates; it's difficult to keep track of all the different spreadsheets and lists I've used over the last couple of years to record things. And some stuff is duplicated inside programs, too, and on web-hosted files.

I really need to sort my records out, they're a horrible mess. :p
 
None, I think.

I did find a neutron star well out into the Abyssal Plain today that might qualify for some furthest form somewhere records when I check...

ETA - checked, no. Still none.
 
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Every time I find something that seems out of the ordinary and I check it turns out the record is slightly higher. Last example of that would be an A class star with some 450 solar radii - turns out the record is around 490. Mind you, there are lots of records that I don't pay attention to, such as "highest metal content" and the like, and with the many detailed scans I've done so far in my exploration career there might be a hidden record or two in there somewhere I'm unaware of.
 
I claim this one

Most number of consecutive M class stars orbited by dull, boring lumps of ice
: Four billion nine hundred and twenty two million, four hundred and thirty two thousand, nine hundred and four and still counting.

I have that many....
+1
You know it's true...[yesnod] (count them if you don't believe me).

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As an aside (please excuse me for this)
The thing that gets me is "O" Class stars ... life span 1 - 10 Million Years.
I have found many, many more with life spans in the hundreds of millions of years!!
What gives? Are they lazy ? Or hanging on for grim death ??

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What's the record for smallest planet?

It was cold that day.... (or it was the way the light shone)
 
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