The
Martian moons tour challenge brought me back to this challenge again. In the Martian moons tour challenge, you have to land within 50km of Olympus in order to succeed. That makes for a pretty generous margin of error as far as completing the challenge goes, but walking 10, 20, 30, or up to 50 kilometers back to base isn't very appealing.
So I wanted to see if I could complete this challenge yet. And the answer is ...
not a chance! This challenge is unbelievably difficult. I started from the beginning and then saved when I was 1,000km from Olympus so I could re-try the last leg after my inevitable failure. After several hours of flying and 6 additional failures (started from the save point), I am giving up.
My biggest problem is that I just can't get in front of the runway. Every time I get up to the runway I am coming in at enough of an angle that there is absolutely no chance staying on the runway. In my best attempt, my wheels touched down just 1 or 2 meters before the runway (which was frustrating), but it didn't matter because despite being very straight, I was still at just enough of an angle that I rolled off the side. So even if I hadn't gotten a failure for touching down before the runway, I would have failed anyway for rolling off the side.
---------- Post added at 05:22 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:37 AM ----------
I got up this morning and almost immediately came back to this challenge. After another dozen attempts:
I lost track of how many tries it took me to get this, but I believe it was more than 20!
Also, I did not complete this from start to finish in 1 go. I resumed from the 1,000km save point several times, then I resumed from about 500km several times, once I finally understood how to get aligned (and stay aligned) with the runway, it then took me another half dozen attempts from a 100km save point to actually touch down near the beginning of the runway without exceeding the horizontal or vertical speed.
This is without a doubt the most insanely difficult thing I've ever done in Orbiter. Aeroslinging Venus was easier than this.
One thing that really helped me with this challenge was when I finally noticed the RATE readout on Surface MFD. Once you have your Norht/South EQU POS where you need it to be, the only way you can keep yourself from drifting is to make sure that you keep your RATE at 0.0000. And it is EXTREMELY sensitive. If you notice your EQU POS goes to 12.744, then you need to bank to the north by an almost imperceptible amount in order to bring the EQU POS back to 12.745. Then if the EQU POS drifts the other direction to 12.746, you need to nudge the vessel to the south by a TINY amount.
And even then ... when you arrive at the runway with an EQU POS of 12.745, you will still be slightly off center! But it will be good enough that you won't have to worry about rolling off the runway at an odd angle.
Hats off to anyone who can complete this challenge repeatedly and without having to resume from a save point.
The only way I would try this again and again would be if the runway were at least 3x wider. (Preferably even more than that.)
An Earth-like runway on Mars just isn't very practical in my humble opinion.
Having said all that, this was an awesome learning experience. At the very least, I think I will be able to land very close to Olympus without using any fuel from now on.