The Planetary Circumnavigation Club

Hello Cmdrs,

My first circumnavigation completed :)

Cmdr name: Mike Kastilione
Planet/Moon: HIP 88155 AB 2 b
https://www.edsm.net/en/system/bodi...55/details/idB/1396127/nameB/HIP+88155+AB+2+b
Gravity: 0.04G
Radius: 363 km
Atmosphere: Thin Ammonia
Approximate distance travelled: 2500 km
Start & End point: -20,5315, 32,9813
Circumnavigation: heading 0° to North Pole, 180° to South Pole, 0° to start/end point
Time taken: approximately 26 hours
Start/finish date: 29.04.3308 - 03.05.3308
Evidence: video recorded
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLsBDIvTZHpxSgHdV9PDJBkMa6Tyuq92Hh

View attachment 305607
Congrat's (again) - this has now been added to the official club records and I've put in an application for your EDSM achievement.

And in other (somewhat shocking) news - the OP has now hit the 100000 character limit! I've had to remove all the old MIA/ONGOING entries from the detailed log but this could mean that this is one of the last circumnavigations that will fit in the original ledger!
 
Hi

My second circumnavigation is over. This time on foot.

Cmdr name: FrankDolas
Planet/Moon: HIP 88155 AB 2 b
Gravity: 0.04G
Radius: 363 km
Atmosphere: Thin Ammonia
Approximate distance travelled: 2331 km
Start & End point: -20,5315, 32,9813
Circumnavigation: heading 0° to North Pole, 180° to South Pole, 0° to start/end point
Time taken: approximately 105 hours
Ship supplies: 16
Start/finish date: 29.04.3308 - 02.06.3308
Evidence: video recorded
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrZwdxcomKdQQQACpKX4_H0QaWZj_B62H
 
Wow - 2300km on foot! That's quite the journey. Congratulations ... I'll definitely try to compact the OP a bit to make enough room to add that one to the records.

o7
 

rootsrat

Volunteer Moderator
Hi

My second circumnavigation is over. This time on foot.

Cmdr name: FrankDolas
Planet/Moon: HIP 88155 AB 2 b
Gravity: 0.04G
Radius: 363 km
Atmosphere: Thin Ammonia
Approximate distance travelled: 2331 km
Start & End point: -20,5315, 32,9813
Circumnavigation: heading 0° to North Pole, 180° to South Pole, 0° to start/end point
Time taken: approximately 105 hours
Ship supplies: 16
Start/finish date: 29.04.3308 - 02.06.3308
Evidence: video recorded
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrZwdxcomKdQQQACpKX4_H0QaWZj_B62H
Congratulations! o7
 
Hi

My second circumnavigation is over. This time on foot.

Cmdr name: FrankDolas
Planet/Moon: HIP 88155 AB 2 b
Gravity: 0.04G
Radius: 363 km
Atmosphere: Thin Ammonia
Approximate distance travelled: 2331 km
Start & End point: -20,5315, 32,9813
Circumnavigation: heading 0° to North Pole, 180° to South Pole, 0° to start/end point
Time taken: approximately 105 hours
Ship supplies: 16
Start/finish date: 29.04.3308 - 02.06.3308
Evidence: video recorded
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrZwdxcomKdQQQACpKX4_H0QaWZj_B62H
###
No offense, but you must be living a very happy and careless live, having so much time to waste for such useless achievement... Bravo, clap/clap.
###
 
Hi

My second circumnavigation is over. This time on foot.

Cmdr name: FrankDolas
Planet/Moon: HIP 88155 AB 2 b
Gravity: 0.04G
Radius: 363 km
Atmosphere: Thin Ammonia
Approximate distance travelled: 2331 km
Start & End point: -20,5315, 32,9813
Circumnavigation: heading 0° to North Pole, 180° to South Pole, 0° to start/end point
Time taken: approximately 105 hours
Ship supplies: 16
Start/finish date: 29.04.3308 - 02.06.3308
Evidence: video recorded
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrZwdxcomKdQQQACpKX4_H0QaWZj_B62H
OK - finally got around to adding your details to the on-foot list in the OP - o7 you madman!

While I was at it I've also logged my own latest circumnavigation (in Odyssey, not on foot) of Col 359 Sector BE-Q c6-0 7 b (more details on that to come).

I've made some space for logging future circumnavigations in the OP by removing the fairly lengthy list of small candidate planets as I think we have enough search tools available these days to find them ourselves.

Finally I've added SRVTracker to the list of handy tools and utilities for planetary circumnavigators.
 
While I was at it I've also logged my own latest circumnavigation (in Odyssey, not on foot) of Col 359 Sector BE-Q c6-0 7 b (more details on that to come).
 
Hi

My second circumnavigation is over. This time on foot.
Cmdr name: FrankDolas
Planet/Moon: HIP 88155 AB 2 b
Gravity: 0.04G
Radius: 363 km
Atmosphere: Thin Ammonia
Approximate distance travelled: 2331 km
Start & End point: -20,5315, 32,9813
Circumnavigation: heading 0° to North Pole, 180° to South Pole, 0° to start/end point
Time taken: approximately 105 hours
Ship supplies: 16
Start/finish date: 29.04.3308 - 02.06.3308
Evidence: video recorded
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrZwdxcomKdQQQACpKX4_H0QaWZj_B62H
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrZwdxcomKdQQQACpKX4_H0QaWZj_B62H
Ohdeargodorotherentity! o_O
That is some trip you took! oh-seven Commander, o7

###
No offense, but you must be living a very happy and careless live, having so much time to waste for such useless achievement... Bravo, clap/clap.
###
And I thought my habit of visiting the Hutton Orbital at least once a month was a bit crazy. x)
 

rootsrat

Volunteer Moderator
Congrat's (again) - this has now been added to the official club records and I've put in an application for your EDSM achievement.

And in other (somewhat shocking) news - the OP has now hit the 100000 character limit! I've had to remove all the old MIA/ONGOING entries from the detailed log but this could mean that this is one of the last circumnavigations that will fit in the original ledger!
Please remind me (I'm knackered after LC :D ) and I'll ask Paul if there is something he can do about the limit for this thread,
 
Please remind me (I'm knackered after LC :D ) and I'll ask Paul if there is something he can do about the limit for this thread,
I think I've actually cleared enough space to keep this going for a while now (unless planetary circumnavigation suddenly has a massive boom in popularity) but thanks for the offer ... and great to see you again at Lavecon (sorry we never had that late night drinking session, although given how trashed I am now, probably just as well).
 

rootsrat

Volunteer Moderator
I think I've actually cleared enough space to keep this going for a while now (unless planetary circumnavigation suddenly has a massive boom in popularity) but thanks for the offer ... and great to see you again at Lavecon (sorry we never had that late night drinking session, although given how trashed I am now, probably just as well).
Haha OK and no worries!

Always great to meet up! I'm pretty sure I drank enough for both of us (and hence slept through the checkout time 🤣)
 
Couple of bits of planetary circumnavigation news.

First I wanted to give a big shoutout to @cratercamper who completed a 4 day circumnavigation of Drevlyada ABC 5 a on 31.01.3309. What was special about this particular circumnavigation was that it was carried out largely HUDless (and mostly without night vision I believe), navigating using just the stars and the body map and, after the first day, not even checking coordinates or compass after the initial morning verification. You can read the full log of the story in the PCC Discord server but I just wanted to include a quick extract here.

I am driving mostly & I am driving: HUDless! 😁 Rules: peek into hull health & fuel is allowed anytime when vehicle not moving. And peek into coords is discouraged & peek into compass/bearing is forbidden (allowed only once at the begginning of the day). Navigation via stars & system map. It's not hard (at least on Drevla), it has the HUDless meditative quality & it makes you stare at the stars instead of the HUD number of compass bearing/azimuth. Which is great - you start recognizing some constellations, somehow you know you go in wrong direction, when the stars all look weird. And as you go, every few minutes, new star scenery is revealed on the horizon - and there is nothing to distract you.

Et1zmgt.png


Also just to say, today I embarked on my 6th planetary circumnavigation, doing a (hopefully) quick tour (in Odyssey) around the potato moon of Col 285 Sector RB-R b19-5 1 a.

RNA7H3E.png


Circumnavigating a malformed potato moon is quite interesting. It takes more effort than usual to stick to the equator and there are also times when, despite no obvious hills, the actual surface of the planet feels distinctly "up hill"! The only other thing to note is that, being Odyssey, I'm suffering stealth attacks by cloaked rocks!

Source: https://youtu.be/V8v7DAZc1kc
 
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