Directional Scanner guide

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The directional scanner is one of the most under-appreciated tools in EVE. It is extremely simple to operate and can be used from any ship without any skill training. However, at first glance it can seem quite hard to extract any useful information from it. This guide covers some of the techniques that can be used with it.

The UI

  • Range is limited to 2,147,483,647bn km, or about 14.35 AU.
  • Angle is relative to the direction your ship is facing. If you select 180 degrees, for example, only objects in front of your ship are included in the scan.
  • Use Active Overview Settings does exactly what it says. When it is active, only items that would appear on your overview are included in the scan results.
  • The Scan button can be used once per second.

Uses of the directional scanner

Avoiding scan probes

If an enemy is trying to probe you down, you will usually have only a brief opportunity to spot their probes before they get an exact hit on your position and warp to you. If you hit the scan button at least every 5 seconds, you have a good chance of spotting the probes, giving you time to warp away to another safe spot.

Finding people at celestial objects

Set the scanner to 360 degrees, maximum range, and warp to a point in range of as many planets/belts as possible (the sun is usually a good starting point). Progressively reduce the range, excluding half the celestials each time, until the target disappears from the results. Then increase range again, eliminating half the remaining celestials each time until the target reappears on the scan results. Keep on doing this until only 1 celestial is left - this is the one nearest the target. This is a form of binary search.

Finding people at safe spots

First, if necessary, use scan probes to get within 14.35 AU of the target, so you can see them on the directional scanner.

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