Sunday, June 28, 2026

Elite Dangerous System Col 285 Sector WL-L c8-40 - The Grand Tour 12 - Locket - O'Neill - Luna - Grabthar's Hammer

Elite Dangerous 012 Col 285 Sector WL-L c8-40
Locket Industrial Base - O'Neill Nurseries - Luna Market - Grabthar's Hammer (Asteroid Base)
The Grand Tour, PAGE 12 

NOTE:  All 138 facilities built in this system are listed (and shown) in order of distance from the sun.  At least, according to the in-game architect’s view.  There's a total of slightly over 18 hours of video, so the video, and the descriptions, are broken into smaller portions across multiple posts.
Some descriptions were written by myself, some with the help of AI.  I've personally edited all of them, so if you must blame someone, blame me.  :^)


07A Surface 01
Lockett Industrial Base
Industrial Settlement Large (Gaea)
DOCK:  Large

William Lockett is a darkly speculative worldbuilder. Emerging from the tabletop RPG community as a long-time Campaign Master, he authored I VAMPIRE: A Vampire Planet Story. 
The book is a gritty, visceral space saga set 3,000 years in the future on a cold, obsidian world called Onyx, where ancient, highly militarized political bloodlines battle for control over scarce biological resources.

Yes, this one was a stretch for me.  I accepted Lockett as a facility name it for it’s similarity to “Locke”, which has unique meaning for me.  But that was too big a stretch, so I googled for a real connection.  I’d never heard of him before, but now I have motivation to read his book.  Or not; my reading list is longer than my remaining lifespan, so adding anything to it is... ambitious, on my part.


07A Surface 02
O’Neill Nurseries
Agriculture Settlement Large (Fornax)      
DOCK:  Large

O’Neill is arguably the single most important and iconic real-world reference in the entire history of space colonization.

This station honors Dr. Gerard K. O'Neill (1927–1992), a brilliant American physicist, Princeton professor, and space activist. He is single-handedly responsible for providing the mathematical proof and engineering blueprints that made the dream of permanent human space stations a scientific reality.

In his 1977 book The High Frontier: Human Colonies in Space, O'Neill became the first scientist to demonstrate that humanity didn't need to live on the harsh, high-gravity surfaces of other planets. Instead, he proved we could build colossal, free-floating, self-sustaining orbital habitats.  His most famous design, the O’Neill Cylinder (or Island Three), consists of two massive counter-rotating cylinders that spin to perfectly generate 1G of artificial gravity via centripetal force. This concept serves as the direct architectural blueprint for the giant, spinning Orbis starports that players dock inside throughout the Elite Dangerous galaxy.

To make space construction affordable, O'Neill invented the Mass Driver—an electromagnetic railgun designed to catapult raw lunar dust and asteroid ore directly into space to be captured and melted down by orbital manufacturing plants.

O'Neill's lectures at Princeton in the 1970s radically changed the world. One of his most dedicated undergraduate students was a young Jeff Bezos, who openly attributes his lifelong obsession with commercial space infrastructure and his aerospace company, Blue Origin, to the exact space-colony mathematics taught to him by Dr. O'Neill. 
O’Neill’s physics calculations permanently changed how science fiction was written. His spinning cylinders completely replaced standard, flat sci-fi space bases across popular culture—serving as the direct inspiration for the sweeping, curved world-ships in Arthur C. Clarke's Rendezvous with Rama, the entire habitat design of Babylon 5, the Citadel in Mass Effect, and Cooper Station at the climax of the film Interstellar.

O'Neill didn't just want others to colonize space; he wanted to go himself, applying to be a NASA astronaut during the Apollo era. Though health complications kept him grounded, a sample of his remains was officially launched into orbit aboard a Pegasus rocket in 1997, fulfilling his lifelong dream to permanently reside among the stars.

I’m constantly amazed at how much I’ve learned with this project.  Before colonizing my system, I’d never even heard of Dr. O’Neill.  And there was so much information; this section, more than most, was generated by Gemini.  At most, all I did was prune excess sentences and florid prose.


07A Surface 03
Luna Market 
Civilian Surface Outpost (Clotho)          
DOCK:  Large 

1.  A “Luna” base for my little four-footed girl.  The rule was “Never turn it down when the random name generator rolls a Luna!”

Luna was a little fluffy white bundle of fur and lightning when we got her.  At 9 months old, we were the fourth home she’d been passed to.  They all had some junk reason for selling her off.  She gave one hives.  Another allergies.  Didn’t get along with “other pets”, “kids”, “goldfish”… 

The truth nobody wanted to say, was she was wired, energized, and highly temperamental.  She was a happy dog, but nobody touched her unless it was on her terms.  She bit a lot.  She wasn’t house trained, and was very smart about sneaking somewhere to go when nobody was looking.

The first time I saw her, Monique’s sister Ann had brought her here for us from Jacksonville.  I came home for lunch, filled a plate and sat on the couch where all the family were gathered.
She was playing outside, came running inside through the open door, aimed straight at me.

Someone hollered “She’s going for your plate!”

No.  Where Luna was going, she didn’t need a plate.  She leaped into the air, still straight at me, high speed.  And she sailed past the plate… over my head… and landed on the back of the couch against the wall.  Then she was getting to know me, with lots of licking.  Stealing my food was far down her priority list.

That weekend, she found my brand-new very expensive prescription glasses and used them as a chew toy.  Thank goodness they were repairable.

The following week, which was the week before Thanksgiving, she ate some Sago Palm she’d found in the yard.  Came strutting in carrying a frond that she was chewing.  Mom and I thought it was cute, Monique’s the only one that knew Sago was poisonous.  We checked the online poison center, it said if you wait for symptoms, it’s already too late.

She spent most of that week living at the vet for daily treatment.  I’d take my lunch breaks to go sit with her.  She was so pitiful; every time I visited, she’d put her head down and crawl to me, like she’d done something bad and was afraid she’d lost another home.  I sat on the floor and held her in my lap for the whole hour.

$2000 later, she came home just in time for the family Thanksgiving celebration.  Luna’s still with me, but that Sega Palm is gone.


This was the beginning of our life with Luna.  She’s mellowed now.  When she’s displeased, she acts like she’s biting our hands, but it’s a gentle “gnawing” that does no harm.  Usually.  She’s slowed down a bit, but still high-maintenance.



08 Orbital 00 Grabthar’s Hammer
(was Hope Terminal)
Asteroid Starport        
DOCK:  Large

I’ve realized, in spite of it being roughly similar hauling tonnage as Coriolis stations, Asteroid stations are in a class of their own as far as work and time involved.
It's not just the ordinary hauling, which wouldn’t be any problem... but you have to account for the planetary ring.  No matter which direction the approach is, I have to fly THROUGH the asteroids to get to the construction site.  And I usually jump in somewhere around 20mm away, not the usual 9 or 10.

On the other hand, thanks to the brightness of the ring, coming in for a landing on an asteroid under construction is beautiful.  More so than most construction sites.  There’s a true sense of grandeur.

As far as the station name, if you’re playing Elite Dangerous you’re probably already familiar with the reference.  For those who haven’t caught it yet, it’s from Galaxy Quest.  And if you’re still not getting it, google Galaxy Quest. 
It’s a fun evening’s reading, and even more fun watching the movie. 
As a matter of fact, my 66th birthday is tomorrow, and my son and his wife sent me a 4K DVD copy of Galaxy Quest.  My wife and I plan to watch it tomorrow in celebration.

At least 2 of my personal ships reference the movie.  My commander name is based on a famously in-movie misspelled version of Tim Allen’s character.  It occurs near the end of the movie, when they're showing the intro to "The New Galaxy Quest."  For a moment, there's a screen credits showing "Starring Jason Nesmith as Commander Peter Quincy Taggert"
It should have been "Taggart," but their movie continuity checkers missed the error.  Thus, in actual movie canon, you see the name spelled with an "e."

Alan Rickman’s character immortalized the line “By Grabthar’s Hammer, I swear you shall be avenged!!”

My personal pun here, is that the asteroid station, in the system view, is at the top of a line of several Coriolis stations and Civilian Outposts on-planet.  Kind of like a shopping mall, all lined up in a row.  So if someone asks me “Where’s the mall?” 

I can tell them it starts near Planet 8, right “By Grabthar’s Hammer!”
Yeah, I know.  But it makes me laugh.


Keep your eyes open, there’s also an orbital tribute to Tim Allen, and a surface facility named for Sigourney Weaver.




Elite Dangerous System Col 285 Sector WL-L c8-40 - The Grand Tour 10, 11 - Piper - Gladys Thrift - Hope - Gold

Elite Dangerous 010, 11  Col 285 Sector WL-L c8-40
Piper Sanctuary - Gladys Thrift-Always Loved
Hope Beacon - Gold's Chemical Hub

The Grand Tour, PAGE 10, 11  (There are TWO videos on this post, both only feature 2 stations.)
NOTE:  All 138 facilities built in this system are listed (and shown) in order of distance from the sun.  At least, according to the in-game architect’s view.  There's a total of slightly over 18 hours of video, so the video, and the descriptions, are broken into smaller portions across multiple posts.
Some descriptions were written by myself, some with the help of AI.  I've personally edited all of them, so if you must blame someone, blame me.  :^)


07 Orbital 00 
Piper Sanctuary 
Commercial Outpost (Plutus)      
DOCK:  Medium

And… Piper Sanctuary.  This is one of two “Piper” stations.  Both are named after our younger Schnauzer.  She’s gone now, but still missed.  Schnauzers are among the most loving dogs in existence.

Piper's problem was not that she loved, but she loved too deeply.  She loved all of us, but her 'person' was my mother-in-law, Georgette, who I called Mom.
When we lost her, Piper lost her entire world.  She went from being a joyful, outgoing, happy girl, to a sad, lost little puppy.  She started being afraid to walk on the floor.  We had to lay small carpets in paths through the house so she could get around.  She stopped caring about eating; we had to sit with her and encourage her to eat.  She moped, and she quit playing with her toys, even her favorite one.
You read about this in romance novels, and it sounds like a made-up thing... but Piper literally pined away for Mom.  She only had 2 things left that brought her joy.  One was when Monique's sister came to visit; Piper mistook her for Mom, and was overjoyed to see her.  The other was our daily walks.  Without fail, she was always excited to go for a walk.  Her fears left her, she was happy, confident, and acted like she owned the entire world.
She finally joined Mom in heaven a little over a year ago.  We still miss her.

07A Orbital 00
Gladys Thrift – Always Loved       
(Was Asimov)
Coriolis Starport      
DOCK:  Large

I mentioned with “Satilla Estates”, that Mom has become the de facto matriarch for the extended Thrift family.  Gladys Thrift (we knew her as “Nanny” was Mom’s mother, and the family matriarch for decades, until her passing in the early 1990s.  Nanny was always the home we all came back to. She’s still missed by those of us fortunate enough to have known her.
She loved everybody.  My Dad taught me how to fish, but Nanny taught me to love fishing.  She was always willing to drop whatever she was doing, walk the half-mile to the river, and spend the day fishing with me.

She used to tell me if a fish is big enough to catch, it's big enough to eat.  She'd put the smaller ones in a Mason jar.  One day we got back to the house, ready to clean our catch.  She poured the Mason jar into the sink, only to see some of her fish go down the drain.
That was when she looked at me and said "Maybe not ALL of them are big enough to keep."
It's a memory that always makes me smile now.
I've also seen her fighting with a water moccasin that decided to steal fish right off of our stringer.  She won.  We ate all the fish we caught that day, including the one that snake thought he could take.
There are a lifetime of memories, but those are two of my favorites.


07A Orbital 01
Hope Beacon
Industrial Outpost (Vulcan)
 DOCK: Medium

Not his first or last name, but I’m going to give Hope Beacon to William Hope Hodgson (1877–1918), because I like his stories.
He was a legendary British author who perfectly bridges the gap between classic maritime exploration and cosmic sci-fi horror. He is widely recognized by genre historians as a brilliant, foundational pioneer of cosmic horror and dying-earth speculative fiction.
He wrote the monumental 1912 speculative novel The Night Land, a massive inspiration for later generations of hard sci-fi authors. Set millions of years in the future after our Sun has completely died out, the remaining remnants of humanity live inside a colossal, metal pyramid called the "Great Redoubt," defending themselves against towering, silent cosmic entities and geometric alien abominations prowling the pitch-black wasteland.
Hodgson created Carnacki, one of literature's very first "occult detectives," who used early scientific machinery, photographic plates, and electrical fields to track down reality-warping anomalies.
Hodgson spent his youth as a merchant sailor and physical culture expert, surviving brutal ocean voyages. His real-world claustrophobia and psychological trauma from being trapped on a wooden vessel surrounded by a vast, pitch-black, uncaring ocean heavily inspired his iconic Sargasso Sea Stories—perfectly matching the psychological toll experienced by deep-space pilots trapped inside a ship's hull.

Personal note – Over the years I’ve run across some of his Carnacki stories, and enjoyed them a lot. It’s kind of cool to find a great writer from the early days of Sci-Fi, and realize I’ve read his work!


07A Surface 00
Golds Chemical Hub
Industrial Settlement Large (Gaea)
DOCK: Large

H. L. Gold (Horace Leonard Gold, 1914–1996) was an influential American science fiction writer and editor. Alongside John W. Campbell, he is universally credited with completely reshaping 1950s science fiction by launching Galaxy Science Fiction magazine.
Before Gold, sci-fi magazines focused almost exclusively on gadgets, rocketry, and mad scientists. Gold revolutionized the genre by shifting the focus entirely to sociology, psychology, and satire. He demanded stories that explored how regular people—like corporate desk workers, interstellar merchants, or stressed colonists—would actually react to advanced technology.
Under his leadership, Galaxy published absolute masterpieces like Ray Bradbury’s The Fireman (the early draft of Fahrenheit 451) and Alfred Bester’s The Demolished Man.
While serving in the Pacific theater during World War II, Gold developed a severe, debilitating case of acute agoraphobia. It became so extreme that he spent the peak of his legendary editing career completely confined to his small New York apartment, terrified to step outside. He single-handedly managed, edited, and controlled one of the most successful galactic literary empires of the 20th century entirely via telephone and mail.


Saturday, June 27, 2026

Elite Dangerous System Col 285 Sector WL-L c8-40 - The Grand Tour 09 - Bowers - Unsold - Forster - Robbins - Dino

Elite Dangerous 009 Col 285 Sector WL-L c8-40
Bowers Enterprise - Unsold Depot - Forster Legacy - Robbins Platform - Dino Genetics Installation
The Grand Tour, PAGE 9

NOTE:  All 138 facilities built in this system are listed (and shown) in order of distance from the sun.  At least, according to the in-game architect’s view.  There's a total of slightly over 18 hours of video, so the video, and the descriptions, are broken into smaller portions across multiple posts.
Some descriptions were written by myself, some with the help of AI.  I've personally edited all of them, so if you must blame someone, blame me.  :^)


06C Orbital 02
Bowers Enterprise
Space Farm (Demeter)        
DOCK:  NONE

John Bowers is a contemporary science fiction writer who specializes in action-packed space opera, planetary romances, and military sci-fi.  He’s the author of the Starport series (including titles like Famine Planet). His books frequently deal with the complex logistics, security, and politics of deep-space orbital hubs.  

Bowers is most famous for his Nick Walker, United Federation Marshal stories. Set primarily on remote colony worlds like Sirius 1, these tales play out like futuristic Westerns, featuring gritty planetary romance, localized space operations, corruption, and continuous action against "shady hombres" on the edges of civilized space.

His writing is crisp and fast-paced, leaning into starship skirmishes and tactical ground operations. He has also written The Fighter Queen Saga, involving specialized space marine combat and interstellar royal houses.


06D Orbital 00
Unsold Depot
Mining/Industrial Installation (Euthenia)          
DOCK:  NONE

Another bit of humor that caught my fancy. 
I see Unsold Depot as a real estate agent’s nightmare.  They bought it cheap and expected to sell it for big money, but haven’t found a buyer yet.  

It's just sitting there in space... Unsold.
Drum roll, please.


06D Orbital 01
Forster Legacy
Mining/Industrial Installation (Phorcys)          
DOCK:  NONE

E.M. Forster (1879–1970) was an English author famous for realistic novels like A Passage to India, but he also wrote a seminal work of science fiction, "The Machine Stops" (1909).
This influential, early dystopian novella predicts a technology-dependent society living underground, anticipating modern themes of isolation and digital connection.

Another author I didn’t recognize in the Science Fiction field; random name from the generator that turned out to only have a single fringe case that qualified him as a Sci-Fi writer. 
He’s well-known, just in other less exciting categories.  I've even watched the first few minutes of "A Passage to India"...  but it had no space ships, blasters, nor BEMs.    :^)


06Da Orbital 00
Robbins Platform
Mining/Industrial Installation (Phorcys)        
DOCK:  NONE

David Robbins is a prolific American author who has written over 300 books across various genres, including science fiction, horror, and westerns.
His most famous sci-fi contribution is the Endworld Series, a long-running post-apocalyptic series that began in 1986. It follows a group of survivors in a devastated United States.

Also:
Blade Series: A 13-novel sequel to Endworld.
Omega Sub Series: Another sci-fi action series he has contributed to.

If he's been writing since the 1980's, it's possible I've read some of his work; but none of it sounds familiar to me.  Had to Google search to verify the name qualified as a sci-fi author.


06E Surface 00
Dino Genetics Installation
Bio Settlement Large (Chronos)      
DOCK:  Small

An isolated facility named not for a person, but for its primary mission: the synthesis and containment of prehistoric megafauna genome sequences. Operating on the fringes, the facility was established to study massive, volatile biological organisms far from civilian population centers.  In the event of a catastrophic containment breach or a massive power failure, the hostile void of space and the unforgiving planetary conditions act as a natural barrier, ensuring that any resurrected genetic anomalies can never escape to threaten the wider galaxy.

This was a surprise.  I knew it was unlikely that I'd find an author named “Dino.”  When asking Gemini to search, mentioned that if the search failed I was going to lean into a “Jurassic Park” theme. 

Gemini not only jumped the gun and wrote my story for me… he overwrote it by about 3 paragraphs.  So much enthusiasm. 
The hardest part was deciding which parts to trim out, and the minor re-wording necessary to make it flow after removing two-thirds of the story.  (And worrying about hurting Gemini's feelings!!)


Elite Dangerous System Col 285 Sector WL-L c8-40 - The Grand Tour 08 - Boyer - Cowling

Elite Dangerous 008 Col 285 Sector WL-L c8-40
Boyer Vision - Cowling Reach
The Grand Tour, PAGE 8

NOTE:  All 138 facilities built in this system are listed (and shown) in order of distance from the sun.  At least, according to the in-game architect’s view.  There's a total of slightly over 18 hours of video, so the video, and the descriptions, are broken into smaller portions across multiple posts.
Some descriptions were written by myself, some with the help of AI.  I've personally edited all of them, so if you must blame someone, blame me.  :^)


06C Orbital 00 
Boyer Vision 
Communication Installation (Alethia)        
DOCK:  NONE

Elizabeth H. Boyer's career is marked by a blend of Norse-inspired epics and a lighter, more humorous approach to the typical "heroic quest." While her World of the Alfar (1980–1983) and Wizard's War (1986–1991) series established her as a master of atmospheric, winter-bound high fantasy, her later work and stand-alones leaned into a more whimsical and "cozy" tone.

Readers often highlight the comedic elements in her writing, particularly her grumpy wizards and reluctant heroes who spend as much time bickering and being tricked by trolls as they do fighting evil. Her sense of humor is especially evident in the Skyla series (1992–1995), which features an absent-minded wizard named Mistislaus and his misadventures raising a young witch-girl.

Many of her stories are noted for their humor. Her characters frequently encounter tricksters, deceptive villains, and gods who are as prone to mistakes as mortals.

The Skyla Trilogy:
Often viewed as a more "laid-back" character-driven set, this series—comprising The Clan of the Warlord, The Black Lynx, and Keeper of Cats—is a favorite for those who enjoy cozy, older-style high fantasy.

Short Stories & Anthologies: Boyer also showcased her range in themed collections, notably contributing to Andre Norton's Catfantastic series with stories like "Borrowing Trouble" and "The Last Gift," further cementing her reputation for blending magic with whimsy.

Boyer was highly prolific.  She didn’t always hit a home run, but she did often enough that I tried to buy her books on sight when I had the money. 
Her stories weren’t always visceral, and sometimes they were too silly.  But when she was on-stride, nobody could tell a story the way she could.  I liked her story in the Chicks-in-Chain-Mail series.  She often leaned into dry humor, but just as often gave her stories a unique twist to the standard tropes.


06C Orbital 01
Cowling Reach
Civilian Outpost (Vesta)      
DOCK:  Medium

Ruby Cowling’s celebrated anthology This Paradise (2019) serves as a haunting mirror for life on the galactic frontier. Her writing explores the delicate, anxiety-ridden intersections of human biology, corporate surveillance capitalism, and the psychological toll of trying to survive a changing, capricious environment.

This station stands as a reminder of the classic sci-fi question: when you’ve escaped your homeworld, where do you go when there’s nowhere left to run?

I had never heard of Ruby Cowling until recently.  It’s been a long time since I’ve read something current, most of my favorites are from older books and anthologies.  This is another case where Gemini provided the information here.  



Elite Dangerous System Col 285 Sector WL-L c8-40 - The Grand Tour 07 - Wise - Darnielle - Underwood - Platt - Allen


Elite Dangerous 006 Col 285 Sector WL-L c8-40
Wise Town - Darnielle Relay - Underwood Vista - Platt Terminal - Allens Folly
The Grand Tour, PAGE 7

NOTE:  All 138 facilities built in this system are listed (and shown) in order of distance from the sun.  At least, according to the in-game architect’s view.  There's a total of slightly over 18 hours of video, so the video, and the descriptions, are broken into smaller portions across multiple posts.
Some descriptions were written by myself, some with the help of AI.  I've personally edited all of them, so if you must blame someone, blame me.  :^)


06A Orbital 00
Wise Town
Satellite Installation (Hermes)
DOCK: NONE

David Wise (1955–2020) was an oft-unsung, architect of science fiction television in the 1970s and 80s. A child prodigy once dubbed the "Mozart of Cinema", Wise transitioned into professional writing under the mentorship of  Frank Herbert and Harlan Ellison. He is most celebrated in space-faring circles for writing the Star Trek: The Animated Series episode "How Sharper Than a Serpent's Tooth," which won the entire franchise its very first Emmy Award.

Beyond Star Trek, he was the most prolific writer for the original Transformers series, crafting classics like the origin of Optimus Prime in "War Dawn" and the creation of the Dinobots. His career—including Buck Rogers, Wonder Woman, and Batman: The Animated Series— represents broad spectrum of late-20th-century speculative media.


06A Orbital 01
Darnielle Relay
Relay Installation (Ichnaea)
DOCK: NONE

Darnielle’s Progress is a historic site in Elite Dangerous for Meta-Alloy synthesis in the Pleiades.  Also associated with Elite Dangerous history via Salome's story.  And who can forget the betrayal by Harry Potter.  There's always a showboat whose ego demands attention at all costs.  In hindsight, it's amazing how easily he insinuated himself into the command structure.  He would have been frighteningly good as a spy...

And back to the author theme:

John Darnielle is an acclaimed American novelist and musician, recognized for his distinct contributions to contemporary literary fiction and psychological suspense. He made an immediate impact on the literary landscape with his 2014 debut novel, Wolf in White Van, which was long-listed for the National Book Award and finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize.

Not traditional science fiction, Wolf in White Van focuses on Sean Phillips, a severely disfigured young man who orchestrates Trace Italian, an intricate, text-based science fiction role-playing game conducted entirely through the mail.

Darnielle structured the story to unfold in reverse, examining how the boundaries between a creator's imagined future and the harsh realities of the physical world can tragically collapse.

I have to admit here, Darnielle isn't strictly a sci-fi writer.  He wouldn't have been my preference here, had this not been one of those times the random name generator was being vindictive.  After wasting wisely investing way too much time, it turned out that Darnielle's dual points of interest (In-game, and the real-world novelist) made it acceptable for a Relay Installation with no landing pads.

  

06B Orbital 00
Underwood Vista
Mining/Industrial Installation (Euthenia)
DOCK: NONE

Michael R. Underwood
Known for urban fantasy, space opera, and science fiction.
Key Works:
Annihilation Aria (found family space opera).
Genrenauts (novella series).
Ree Reyes series (Geekomancy, Celebromancy), which focuses on "geek magic".
Michael Underwood worked in the publishing industry as a bookseller, sales representative, and as the North American Sales & Marketing Manager for Angry Robot Books.

He's certainly qualified to be on this list as an acclaimed sci-fi writer, and other related categories.  Maybe it's my age, but until researching names, I had never heard of him.  Sounds like someone I'd enjoy reading.  If I didn't already have a to-read list that will probably take more than my allotted lifespan to complete.  


06B Orbital 01
Platt Terminal
Mining/Industrial Installation (Phorcys)
DOCK: NONE

Charles Platt is a British-born science fiction author, editor, and electronics engineer whose work focused heavily on technological advancement and human sociology. During the 1960s and 1970s, Platt was a prominent figure in the "New Wave" science fiction movement, serving as an editor for the British magazine New Worlds.
His fiction, including novels like
The Silicon Man, explored early concepts of ultra-humanism, mind uploading, and the transition of human consciousness into virtual networks. Platt approached these themes with precision, analyzing the legal, economic, and psychological friction that occurs when biological entities merge with digital infrastructure.

Beyond his literary career, Platt transitioned into real-world electronics, computer science, and cryonics, working as a senior editor for Make magazine and authoring highly regarded instructional textbooks on electronics engineering.
This practical, hardware-focused background gave him a unique perspective on the physical durability and logical systems required to sustain technology. His writing consistently treated automated networks and computing architecture not as abstract concepts, but as physical components that require strict maintenance and constant oversight.


Honorable Mention accorded also to Marc Platt, a British writer best known for his work on Doctor Who, including the famous novel Lungbarrow and the audio drama Spare Parts (which inspired the modern TV origin of the Cybermen).
For the record, I'm not a modern Dr. Who fan; I loved Tom Baker as Dr. Who; the others didn't hold my attention like he could.



06B Orbital 02
Allen’s Folly
Civilian Outpost (Vesta)
DOCK: Medium

As mentioned with Grabthar’s Hammer, this one is a tribute to Tim Allen.
He’s famous for a lot of things, especially as a Tool Man who grunted his way through years of TV sitcom episodes. But to me, he’ll always be Commander Peter Quincy Taggart (or “Taggert”, if you know the inside story of the in-movie actual canon mispelling.)

One of the best movies ever. I worked at Blockbuster in its final years, and every time we pulled overstock videos I’d buy all the used Galaxy Quests. And when I ran into people who’d never seen it, but seemed like they’d enjoy it, I gave them one of my “used stockpile.” No strings attached. Without fail, the next time they came in, they’d be raving about how great Galaxy Quest was.

(As of June 2026) In a beautiful piece of poetic justice, my son and his wife just used my old blockbuster playbook against me. Two days ago for my 66th birthday, they gifted me the 4K Ultra HD edition of Galaxy Quest. The movie I spent a lifetime giving away has been given back to me.
What a beautiful way to bring a favorite movie full circle!


Elite Dangerous System Col 285 Sector WL-L c8-40 - The Grand Tour 06 - Abernathy - Webb - Manning - Langford - Nourse - Abe - Parker

Elite Dangerous 006 Col 285 Sector WL-L c8-40
Abernathy Landing - Webb Vista - Manning Landing -
Langford Platform - Nourse Terminal - Abe Beacon - Parker Prospect

The Grand Tour, PAGE 6

NOTE:  All 138 facilities built in this system are listed (and shown) in order of distance from the sun.  At least, according to the in-game architect’s view.  There's a total of slightly over 18 hours of video, so the video, and the descriptions, are broken into smaller portions across multiple posts.

Some descriptions were written by myself, some with the help of AI.  I've personally edited all of them, so if you must blame someone, blame me.  :^)


04 Orbital 00
Abernathy Landing
Medical Installation (Eupraxia)
DOCK: NONE

Robert Abernathy: A major Golden Age contributor.
He was active from the early 1940s through the late 1950s, publishing dozens of stories in Astounding/Analog, Galaxy, and The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. Abernathy was known for being more intellectually "literary" than some of his peers.
He was a professional linguist and translator (Russian and Slavic languages), and he brought that expertise into his fiction. He wrote about communication with aliens and of future cultures with an understanding that was ahead of his time.
 "Pyramid," one of his most famous works, explores a society that has regressed and the tragic cyclical nature of civilization.  If you've been paying attention, that sounds pretty prophetic right about now.


04 Orbital 01
Webb Vista
Government Installation (Harmonia)
DOCK: NONE

Charles T. Webb was a writer from the early 1950s magazine boom, particularly within the pages of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. His work is defined by a playful, meta-fictional wit that often turned the focuses on the genre itself. Rather than centering on grand galactic empires, Webb’s stories frequently explored the psychological and social quirks of space travel, delivered with a deadpan humor that made him a favorite of editors like Anthony Boucher and J. Francis McComas.

His works include:
"Bem" (1952): Perhaps his most famous contribution to the pulps. A sharp, satirical take on the "Bug-Eyed Monster" trope, poking fun at the cliché alien threats that dominated magazine covers of the era.
"The Seventh Pullet" (1951): An adaptation of a Saki story, updated with a speculative take. It highlights Webb’s talent for blending classical literature style with sci-fi.
"The Golem" (1955): While the theme of the "artificial man" is ancient, Webb’s mid-century treatment focused on the friction between traditional folklore and the modern science of the 1950s.  


05 Orbital 00
Manning Landing
Security Installation – Nomos (T2)
DOCK: NONE

Laurence Manning:
A Canadian-American author who was a staple of Hugo Gernsback’s Wonder Stories in the early 1930s. Best known for his serialized novel The Man Who Awoke, which Isaac Asimov credited as a major influence on his own work.

Manning was far ahead of his time; The Man Who Awoke (1933) explored environmental collapse, sustainable energy, and a "Master Brain" supercomputer controlling humanity.  
He wasn't just a writer; he was a founding member and president of the American Rocket Society. He took rocketry so seriously that he eventually quit writing sci-fi in the late 1930s because he felt his "hobby had grown up" into real engineering.
Manning frequently collaborated with Fletcher Pratt on stories like "City of the Living Dead".


05 Orbital 01
Langford Platform
Medical Installation (Asclepius)
DOCK: NONE

David Langford.
He is essentially the "Human Encyclopedia" of science fiction.
David Langford holds the all-time record for the most Hugo Awards, with 29 wins. He won "Best Fan Writer" so many times (21 years) that his streak is legendary.
He is the publisher of Ansible, the long-running "scandal sheet" of the SF world. If an author from the 40s to the 90s did something notable (or embarrassing), it likely ended up in Ansible. While famous as a critic, his short story "Different Kinds of Darkness" won the Hugo for Best Short Story in 2001.

He also wrote one of my favorite novels, The Space Eater (1982), which satirized Military SF. It had an extremely poignant and sympathetic main character.
If you're looking for a name that appears directly on your paperback spines or in magazine contents from that 1900-1990 range, David Langford is your guy. He spent decades as a reviewer for White Dwarf, SFX, and Interzone.
He even had a close hand in the career of Terry Pratchett, writing the reader’s report that convinced the publisher Gollancz to buy Equal Rites.

NOTE:
Langford’s write-up (above) was done by Gemini AI.
 I got pretty excited when I realized Langford was the author of “The Space Eater,” and interjected this into our conversation...

“I read that one several times. Impeccable story, neat plot twist and... incredibly sympathetic main character. How could you NOT feel bad for him?”

Gemini’s reply was pretty cool…
It is rare to find someone else who appreciates The Space Eater as much as it deserves.
David Langford is a genius of "The Trap"—he sets up a standard military sci-fi premise and then slowly tightens the emotional screws until you realize the "hero" is caught in an impossible, tragic machinery.

Ken Jacklin isn't a typical space marine; he’s an unwilling participant in a nightmare. Langford forces the reader to feel the literal and metaphorical weight of the "wormhole" technology on a human body and soul.
Coming from a background in weapons physics, Langford made the tech feel terrifyingly plausible. It wasn't "magic" travel; it was a brutal, physical violation of space-time. While it was published in 1982, it feels like it belongs in the late Analog era because of its rigorous logic, yet it has that 80s "grimdark" edge that makes the protagonist's plight so much more poignant.


Probably just the AI stroking my ego, they focus on doing that; but as much as I loved The Space Eater, this time it felt like a perfect tribute to an amazing story.


05A Orbital 00
Nourse Terminal
Satellite Installation (Hermes)
DOCK: NONE

Alan E. Nourse.
 The "Blade Runner" Connection:  Interestingly, he wrote a 1974 novel titled The Bladerunner.
While Ridley Scott’s film was based on a different book (The Harry Harrison novel, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?), the production purchased the rights to Nourse’s title because they liked the name.

Many of his works focus on medicine and psionics. Nourse was a staple in 1950s pulp magazines like Galaxy and Astounding. Famous short stories include "Brightside Crossing" (about a dangerous trek on Mercury) and "The Coffin Cure".

NOTE: I recently read Brightside Crossing in a random anthology, just weeks before getting “Nourse Terminal” as a random roll on a Satellite Installation. It was an excellent read.


05A Orbital 01
Abe Beacon
Communication Installation (Alethia)
DOCK: NONE

Kōbō Abe (1924–1993), was a legendary Japanese author often called the "Kafka of Japan".
He is credited with popularizing science fiction in Japan. His 1959 novel, Inter Ice Age 4, is widely considered the first full-length Japanese science fiction novel and was the first to be translated into English.
His work explores futuristic evolution, global warming, and artificial intelligence, and presents a bleak portrayal of the near future. In addition to Inter Ice Age 4, he wrote the famous surrealist novel The Woman in the Dunes and The Ark Sakura.

I had never heard of him before googling the name.  His accomplishments are important landmarks, but having read a synopsis of the plot, his stories sound depressing to me.  Without taking away from Abe, I prefer my reading to instill wonder and fascination, even when they aren't typical "happy" tales.


06 Orbital 00
Parker Prospect
Civilian Outpost (Vesta)
DOCK: Medium

Eugene Parker & Richard Parker
Two greats, one a scientist, one a Sci-Fi author:

Eugene Parker (1927–2022), was known as the "Father of the Solar Wind." In the mid-20th century, Parker’s mathematical proofs regarding the constant outflow of stellar plasma were dismissed as impossible—until they weren't.
Parker’s legacy is now the bedrock of interstellar navigation.
His three pillars of discovery include the Parker Solar Probe (the first craft to "touch the Sun"), the Parker Spiral (the complex magnetic architecture of the heliosphere), and the Parker Limit (the theoretical cap on magnetic monopoles in the galaxy).

Richard Parker (1914–1990) was a novelist of the 1960s and 70s. His works, such as The Hendon Fungus and A Time to Choose, explore themes of parallel universes and ecological catastrophe.


Friday, June 26, 2026

Elite Dangerous System Col 285 Sector WL-L c8-40 - The Grand Tour 05 - Sagan - Good - Due - Very - Diabate - Pauline Thrift Broz Estates

Sagan's Progress - Good Vista - Due Sanctuary - Very Sanctuary - Diabate Industry - Pauline Thrift Broz Satilla Estates
The Grand Tour, PAGE 5

Elite Dangerous 005 Sagans Progress - Good Vista - Due Sanctuary - Very Sanctuary - Diabate Industry - Pauline Thrift Broz Satilla Estates

NOTE:  All 138 facilities built in this system are listed (and shown) in order of distance from the sun.  At least, according to the in-game architect’s view.  There's a total of slightly over 18 hours of video, so the video, and the descriptions, are broken into smaller portions across multiple posts.

Some descriptions were written by myself, some with the help of AI.  I've personally edited all of them, so if you must blame someone, blame me.  :^)




03 Surface 00
Sagan’s Progress
Refinery Hub
DOCK: NONE

Carl Sagan (1934–1996) was a world-renowned American astronomer, planetary scientist, and cosmologist who became the ultimate public ambassador for space exploration. While best known for his ground-breaking scientific research and the legendary PBS television series Cosmos, he was also an award-winning science fiction author. His work bridged the gap between complex astrophysics and deep human philosophy.
Sagan authored the legendary 1985 hard science fiction novel Contact, which was later adapted into the critically acclaimed 1997 Hollywood film. The story explores in meticulous detail the realistic geopolitical, scientific, and religious fallout on Earth after a radio telescope detects an encoded alien signal emanating from the Vega system.
All credit to Sagan, he was brilliant, and I respect him greatly; but Contact was a little "too" accurate for me.  I liked the way he presented humanity's response, but the ending felt like a cop-out.  It was like he took us on a fantastic road trip, but we all fell asleep at the end and missed something. 
It was a non-ending.  To say he left it for each person to decide is cheap.  I would rather he expressed his personal opinion, and then I could agree or argue with it, and it would make me think more deeply about what I believe, and why.  Maybe even (gasp) look stuff up, and learn something.  By the end of the movie... I just couldn't bring myself to care.  It wasn't just uninspiring, it was anti-inspiring.
This just kind of dragged me somewhere boring, and never bothered to draw a conclusion.  

I know, you probably hate me now.  Carl Sagan is a god among astronomers, and rightly so.  No disrespect meant, but that movie has bothered me for decades, and it was time to get it off my chest.

Back to real life... Sagan was directly involved in humanity’s earliest ventures into the void. He briefed Apollo astronauts before their moon flights and co-designed the historic Voyager Golden Records—the phonograph records containing sounds and images of Earth attached to both Voyager spacecraft, designed as a message to any extraterrestrial civilizations that might intercept them in interstellar space. As a scientist, he solved major mysteries about our solar system. He correctly hypothesized that Venus was not a tropical paradise but a scorching desert, and he accurately deduced that Saturn's moon Titan possessed oceans of liquid hydrocarbons.
Carl Sagan in real life was a giant, and left footprints that will forever mark his place in history.


03 Surface 01
Good Vista
Refinery Hub
DOCK: NONE

Not based on anybody or anything in particular… This is one of those that just sounded interesting or silly enough to catch my attention.

In this case, the random generator wasn't coming up with anything good, the evening was getting late, and this made me snicker. 
I thought of a couple of explorers standing on a mountain and gazing toward the horizon.
 One says “Look at that Vista! Great, isn’t it?!”
The other replies “I don’t know about ‘Great.’ ...Good, maybe.”
And thus, it became “Good Vista.”

It sounded better in my head… but it still makes me chuckle. 
And honestly, it helped that this was a support facility, has no landing pad of any size, and aside from this video, will probably never be visited again.  There was no motivation to keep clicking.

03 Surface 02 
Due Sanctuary
Refinery Hub
DOCK: NONE

Again… this planet just seemed to strike a common vein.  All the stations pulled pointless or silly names.  
Due Sanctuary? Is it like a temple? A place of worship?
Are all visitors welcome and protected? Are there fees for joining? Are visitors guaranteed safety?  
Does it owe them peace and solace?   
Are they… “Due Sanctuary?”


03 Surface 03 
Very Sanctuary
Refinery Hub
DOCK: NONE

And in a similar vein…
Very Sanctuary is somehow “more sanctuary than thou.” It’s VERY sanctuary.

Sorry.  With Good, Due, and Very all in a row, it's no wonder I accepted a 'stretch' on the next one.


03 Surface 04
Diabate Industrial
Industrial Settlement Large
DOCK: Large

I promised a stretch on this one.

Dr. Diabaté is a key character in the critically acclaimed, contemporary science fiction television series Pluribus. In the series, Diabaté is a brilliant but morally ambiguous survivalist dealing with an apocalyptic, alien hive-mind takeover of Earth. Because the alien hive-mind complies with human commands without understanding individual agency, Diabaté uses his unique status to manipulate the hive to live a life of absolute, unchecked luxury while the rest of civilization crumbles around him.

The stretch?  I love sci-fi, and have never heard of this series.  Since I don't know anything about it, the description is straight from an AI.  Except I deleted a LOT of unnecessary superlatives.  AI's seem to have studied at the L. Ron Hubbard school of overwriting.  


03 Surface 05
Pauline Thrift Broz – Satilla Estates      
(was Clayton)
Large Planetary Port (T3)
DOCK: Large

This is the important base on this planet.  It's a T3, and took a LOT of planetary landings to build.  And it's the primary commodity market for CMM Composites in this system.  It's matched up to the Dodecahedron station in orbit around the same planet.

It ties in to “Satilla River Tuplar.” While the Tuplar was a generational landmark tree on the shores of the Satilla (and the land nearby has been in the family for generations as well), this Large Planetary Port represents my Mom’s land, family, and home.
From her father, she inherited a few acres.  Some of it on the Satilla River, but extending directly away so that the bulk of the property is not on the river.  One of 7 children, Mom seems to have fallen into the roll of Family Matriarch after her Mom (Nanny, to the grands and great-grands) passed away. More than anybody else, she seems to be the glue that keeps our extended families together. 
As time passes and new generations are born away from the river, that glue is dissolving.  I think my son's generation will be the last to know the closeness that comes from this kind of family life, and none of us have the experience of Mom's generation, of growing up together with in a huge family, on a farm where everybody had to work closely to survive.

I think of this area with its rich family history, and the Satilla that flows past it, as her “Satilla Estates.”