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SweatySack
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Posted - 2006.04.10 04:41:00 -
[1]
I know I am asking for this website for the third time on here.
First time I did not bookmark it, and now I am on a freshly formatted drive and lost it again.
Can any of you fine people help me with the URL for this site? 
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SweatySack
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Posted - 2006.04.10 05:17:00 -
[2]
Someone must know. I am looking for the website that shows how far, and how much fuel you use to jump a dread, carrier, ect.
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Hoozin
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Posted - 2006.04.10 05:20:00 -
[3]
http://www.eve-icsc.com/jumptools/jumpplanner.php
welcome --------------------------------- Proper Haikue requires Gills ... and pretty panties. |

Marcus Tedric
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Posted - 2006.04.10 10:25:00 -
[4]
Perfect thread...
The ICSC site is great and the tool seems to work perfectly...
But where does this information come from? Where, please, can I find out the Light-Year distance between stars in-game?
Is there a map option I haven't discovered yet?
Regards
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Marcus Tedric
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Posted - 2006.04.11 19:26:00 -
[5]
Little bump to ask if anyone can tell me?
Please.
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Simlife
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Posted - 2006.04.11 19:54:00 -
[6]
It's made using a nifty database/script I would expect.
Don't worry, I'm told that on the map a circle appears which shows your current jump range when you pilot a jumpdrive enabled ship, and the planner is good for long jumps but when you have trained your jump calabration skill up, your not going to need the jump planner much.
It also can mess up on ranges sometimes so it's realy a refrence tool.
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Marcus Tedric
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Posted - 2006.04.13 08:31:00 -
[7]
Originally by: Simlife It's made using a nifty database/script I would expect.
Don't worry, I'm told that on the map a circle appears which shows your current jump range when you pilot a jumpdrive enabled ship, and the planner is good for long jumps but when you have trained your jump calabration skill up, your not going to need the jump planner much.
It also can mess up on ranges sometimes so it's realy a refrence tool.
Thanks very much for that.
However, it would be much nicer if the Light-Year distance could be added to the map between waypoints when you plot a route.
Or even added to the system info as a distance from your current location...
But thanks anyway.
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Boonaki
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Posted - 2006.04.13 08:33:00 -
[8]
Originally by: Simlife It's made using a nifty database/script I would expect.
Don't worry, I'm told that on the map a circle appears which shows your current jump range when you pilot a jumpdrive enabled ship, and the planner is good for long jumps but when you have trained your jump calabration skill up, your not going to need the jump planner much.
It also can mess up on ranges sometimes so it's realy a refrence tool.
Haven't seen that yet. Will have to look.
Fear the Ibis of doom. |

Shinhan
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Posted - 2006.05.04 11:51:00 -
[9]
excerpt from ICSC website:
Quote:
Apparently after acquiring a comprehensive database of all known star systems, stargate routes, and their coordinates, a corporation involved in building the new capital ships had developed a programming solution to determine the distance between any two solar systems. By entering in the names of both solar systems, you could determine the straight-line distance between them. Since jump drives use straight-line distance, this was information that was critically important to the pilots of Jump Drive capable ships.
That means that they calculated jump distance using trigonometry for 3D system. So, if you want to calculate for yourself, get the data dump (of entire map of EVE) from somewhere on this site and calculate all the distances yourself 
the DAEDALUS PROJECT |

Sebastato
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Posted - 2006.05.04 13:26:00 -
[10]
Or use this offline jump drive tool. EveRouter Eve Navigation Router
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