I'm slowly working out some fleet make up we can use when mining gets serious, like using a Prospector and MOLE in support of an Orion, and what other protection the fleet needs etc: but things about the Orion are theorycrafting at the moment. Meanwhile, we have the MOLE and Prospector to worry about. I will worry about the ROC and hand mining opportunities later too.
I've spent most of the last 7 days purposefully dropping into a moon (Lyria) with a Prospector to decide on some tactics to use while in a hot, detectable ship, with limited firepower to defend itself. The idea is to work out what strategies work, and what do not. Flying alone is definitely on my list of "Don't do that, stupid", but I did it to see what's possible. Also,, I don't surrender if I'm caught. Not in a prospector and definitely not if their is quantanium on board. I'd rather get them all excited and kill me before I surrender. The cost to me is some time and what I'm wearing. Everything else on my ship is inconsequential. If you stop to talk, the quant won't have enough time left to get back to the station before it explodes you or you are forced to eject it. So much for that ransom you just paid.
Some miner safety advice: You don't need to do any of this, but it works for me.
I'm working out a few other things, like how to manage things in a group, etc. We used to do this regularly. The only thing I'll say is, don't leave the group and go off too far alone. They're losing a valuable team member, you're losing their eyes to help yours.
I've spent most of the last 7 days purposefully dropping into a moon (Lyria) with a Prospector to decide on some tactics to use while in a hot, detectable ship, with limited firepower to defend itself. The idea is to work out what strategies work, and what do not. Flying alone is definitely on my list of "Don't do that, stupid", but I did it to see what's possible. Also,, I don't surrender if I'm caught. Not in a prospector and definitely not if their is quantanium on board. I'd rather get them all excited and kill me before I surrender. The cost to me is some time and what I'm wearing. Everything else on my ship is inconsequential. If you stop to talk, the quant won't have enough time left to get back to the station before it explodes you or you are forced to eject it. So much for that ransom you just paid.
Some miner safety advice: You don't need to do any of this, but it works for me.
- Know who else is using the station with you. That can be a good early warning sign. Those two guys dressed in heavy armor with way too many weapons probably aren't miners. Some of them are total idiots and even talk to you like they own the place, or read the ship you're getting, pester you etc.. Most miners wear either regular clothing, or a simple space suit and helmet. No weapons. Occasionally a miner will be wearing medium (See my pic) or even heavy armor, but if they're not in TEST - don't trust them. Just don't.
- When you get to an OM point to go down to the surface of a moon (or when leaving the moon), watch for a momentary blip on your radar. That's not good news. Also you can send a single radar ping up there. Any blip that shows up is also not good news.
- While prospecting (even in a MOLE) you will need to ping your radar to see what's further than say 1-2 Kms away. Don't ignore other ships pinging, or other ships that show up on your radar. If you don't know who it is, they're suspect - get out of hell. If they're on your radar, you're mostly too late to react if they're hunting for a miner, but there are still things you can do. Don't go up, not right away. And for heaven's sake, don't ping. Just move away from that ping's direction (not 180 degrees, but some random direction more than 120 degrees or so to maximize what they need to search for you). In a prospector at full throttle, you get 20 Km away in a little under 200 seconds. That's a long time, so eject your quant. You can always get more.
- Also, while you're mining, your eyes need to scan a few things, not just the rock. You need to get into the habit of glancing at the radar, and doing eye scans on the horizon. You also need to make sure you look at the mining laser readout. Situational awareness needs to rule, or you're just so much burnt meat, broke, or both.
- Speaking of pinging, once you ping, select an ore ping return to move to, and put your ships reticle just above it. At full throttle, it takes just under 10 seconds to go 1Km. You should see what returned the ping when you're about 1.4 Km's away from a rock, less if it's a gem collection, but you're probably not dressed for that. Anyway, you don't need to ping more than once to get to your destination.
- Ping only while your ship is not moving.
- If you're going to go up, try to have another option than going to the closest OM point. If they have a spotter, that's where he'll be. More than once I've seen other OM's having a ship loitering too.
- Keep an eye on the ships around the station, and at the route to the station. Some of them might be mining ships, but they're not usually loitering around.
- Be in Discord if others are in there, even if you're not participating in the activity that's going on, there are TESTies who would love a chance to kick some ass, and some of them are pretty damn good at it.
I'm working out a few other things, like how to manage things in a group, etc. We used to do this regularly. The only thing I'll say is, don't leave the group and go off too far alone. They're losing a valuable team member, you're losing their eyes to help yours.