OK, here's the latest set from my ED7K Survey. First the table (hopefully this time I've fixed the image URLs so they don't turn into pictures) , then the Tourist Summaries.
System name | Planet ID | Dist. from Sol (ly) | First discovered by | Contributed by | System star(s) type | Ringed EL? | Moons | Screenshot URL | Notes | X | Y | Z |
KYLOALL UO-A d1584 | B 2 | 22600.3 | ALEX TRAUT | SAPYX | M3 IIIB, K2 VAB | FALSE | 1 | https://i.imgur.com/YvlSDl0.png | ELW has a landable moon | -8953.28125 | -995.34375 | 20727.34375 |
KYLOABS UZ-W d2-3221 | 8 | 21520.9 | SAPYX | | F2 VB | FALSE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/gJllspi.png | | -4635.28125 | -288.78125 | 21013.78125 |
WEPAE NY-R e4-3717 | C 10 | 24935.5 | ROCKRT | SAPYX | Neutron star, A9 VB, K0 VA | FALSE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/jtCVxO6.png | | -6260.6875 | -637.9375 | 24128.375 |
WEPOOE FG-Y e4292 | 15 a | 24126.3 | SAPYX | | B0 VZ, TTS4 VI, TTS7 VI, TTS6 VI | FALSE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/xAMuMMi.png | ELW is a moon of a planet(HMCP) | -5024.3125 | -1238.71875 | 23564.8125 |
WEPOOE MY-Z d13-2034 | 5 | 24965.9 | SAPYX | | A9 VB | FALSE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/AbdcpWM.png | Binary ELWs | -4529.15625 | -1125.5625 | 24525.84375 |
WEPOOE MY-Z d13-2034 | 4 | 24965.9 | SAPYX | | A9 VB | FALSE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/99TntM4.png | Binary ELWs | -4529.15625 | -1125.5625 | 24525.84375 |
WEPOOE XU-F d11-4078 | 6 | 24622.8 | SAPYX | | A9 VI | FALSE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/LbTbYlE.png | | -4289.71875 | -897.3125 | 24229.6875 |
WEPOOE TS-B d650 | 2 | 23720.8 | SAPYX | | A8 VI | FALSE | 1 | https://i.imgur.com/PY7KaNW.png | ELW has a landable moon | -4300.0625 | -582 | 23320.53125 |
WEPOOE ZE-A d5648 | A 8 | 23850.0 | SAPYX | | F3 VI, G6 VAB | FALSE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/cppcEIS.png | | -5060.40625 | -1219.34375 | 23275.0625 |
WEPOOE WJ-A d2319 | BC 4 | 23891.2 | SAPYX | | F1 VB, K5 VA, M5 VA | FALSE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/2q79bvt.png | | -5143.9375 | -1081.1875 | 23305.78125 |
WEPOOE EK-C d14-1696 | 2 | 25060.5 | SAPYX | | F0 VI | TRUE | 1 | https://i.imgur.com/Fq2rmkS.png | ELW has a landable moon | -5133.28125 | -50 | 24529.09375 |
WEPOOE DM-L d8-91 | 2 | 24440.1 | SAPYX | | F8 VI | FALSE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/12HR8Dx.png | | -4558.4375 | -684.6875 | 24001.5 |
WEPOOE GS-B d13-1212 | 1 | 24899.4 | SAPYX | | G4 VA | FALSE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/EmQHH6o.png | | -4649.28125 | -1141.0625 | 24434.84375 |
WEPOOE ZY-A c16-123 | 1 | 24414.1 | SAPYX | | G8 VAB | FALSE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/dXc1546.png | | -4802.4375 | -256.84375 | 23935.71875 |
WEPOOE EK-I c25-2641 | A 8 | 24774.8 | SAPYX | | G3 VAB, M6 VA | FALSE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/90fssiT.png | | -4526.34375 | -458.625 | 24353.53125 |
WEPOOE MK-C d14-4764 | 7 | 24952.1 | SAPYX | | G7 VAB | FALSE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/fJZSulc.png | Binary ELWs | -4543.9375 | -28.28125 | 24534.8125 |
WEPOOE MK-C d14-4764 | 8 | 24952.1 | SAPYX | | G7 VAB | FALSE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/kU8V21U.png | Binary ELWs | -4543.9375 | -28.28125 | 24534.8125 |
WEPOOE FL-P d5-6268 | BC 2 | 24237.1 | SAPYX | | G4 VAB, M5 VA, L0 V | FALSE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/IARKe6Q.png | | -4579.9375 | -1271.03125 | 23766.46875 |
WEPOOE SQ-A c15-394 | B 4 | 24382.0 | SAPYX | | K9 VA, M2 VA, M3 VA | FALSE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/n0ox63g.png | | -4752.375 | -673.46875 | 23904.875 |
WEPOOE IF-R d4-4297 | B 1 | 24113.2 | SAPYX | | M4 IIIB, M4 VA, K4 VA | FALSE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/S3GPPVm.png | | -4055.375 | -1295.1875 | 23734.4375 |
HYPOE PRUAE ZE-Z d7510 | 5 | 24932.6 | SAPYX | | A6 VI | TRUE | 0 | https://i.imgur.com/IfTUTYY.png | | -3480.625 | -865.53125 | 24673.25 |
Enroute to Wepooe...
Kyloall - The Red Giant in this system is at just the right distance to make most tof the worlds of the secondary star terraformable - except of course the one that doesn't need further terraforming. Being in a tourist hotspot (it's enroute to the Dryooe Prou GGG and on the main line from Colonia to Beagle Point), so it's no surprise that I'm not the first visitor. Group 1 (small) but generally pleasant.
Kyloabs - For a Group 3 (large) world, it's quite small and pleasant, though the month-and-a-half-long day might take some getting used to.
Wepae - This world orbits a distant secondary star in a Neutron Star system. Again, the high traffic along the Neutron Expressway to Beagle Point means this star was already explored. Cold, Group 1.
Wepooe Sector worlds...
FG-Y - a rare ELW found in a B-class star system. As is quite common for ELWs in such systems, this ELW is a moon of a much larger lava-world HMC. Group 1, small and chilly.
MY-Z - my first ever Binary ELW star system. Planet 5 was the closer of the two as I approached, so it was scanned first. The two worlds are close enough to loom large in each other's skies. The two worlds are evenly matched twins, both in Group 3 and both slightly cooler than Earth.
XU-F - Group 2 (thick-aired), though at the smaller, not-too-thick end of the Group. Surface conditions are not so comfortable, with a three-month-long day and a high axial tilt.
TS-B - This star system is a chaotic mess, with planets (including the ELW) flying about all over the place at weird angles. The world is another Group 2, this time with a super-thick atmosphere. The chilly winters are made much worse by the near-90-degre axial tilt.
ZE-A - Group 3, and the days just keep getting longer - this one's at three and a half months.
WJ-A - Group 3. The days on this fetid jungle planet with multiple suns might seem like they never end.. that's because, at five and a half months long, they almost never do.
EK-C - Another Group 3 with a three-month-long day - this cluster of them is really messing with my averages. The only redeeming features are that it was my first ever Ringed ELW discovery, and there's a little potato-moon in a very scenic orbit.
DM-L - Group 1, this small tropical world with a perfect-match day length must seem like a paradise compared to many of the previous worlds.
GS-B - Here we have a Group 1 "desert planet" - too hot and dry for colonists to be truly happy.
ZY-A - Group 2, and here we have a new personal-best record holder for hottest desert planet. At 318 K it's nearly at the maximum for human habitability, and that 1.2% water might sound like a lot, but it's still nowhere near "humid". So it's likely another desert.
EK-I - As a Group 3 world it's a bit on the large and heavy side, but otherwise nothing too nasty.
MK-C - Another binary ELW system, my second; this time they're mis-matched, with the larger planet 7 being Group 3 and the smaller number 8 is a Group 2. Conditions on the worlds are not what you might expect: the larger, thin-aired one is a warm jungle world, while the small, thick-aired one is a dry tundra planet.
FL-P - Cool, Group 1 world.The high axial tilt is mitigated somewhat by having three suns to even out the heating.
SQ-A - On the smallish side, even for a Group 1 world. Cool.
IF-R - An unusual system, with just three stars and the ELW, no other planets or moons. The primary star is a Red Giant, the ELW orbits a matching-colour Red Dwarf in a mildly eccentric orbit. This Group 1 world easily qualifies as a Desert Planet, and up close one can see the seas on this world are small and disconnected.
And one more, after the Wepooe survey was finished...
Hypoe Pruae - at 1.59 Gs, this Group 3 world is my new record-holder for highest surface gravity. Curiously, it is not also my highest-mass ELW; I have another that's less dense, so it has more mass but less gravity. For such a large planet, it's rotating quite rapidly (a day is about 12 hours), so if you want to feel lighter, I'd suggest living on the equator.