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dark sun manual downloadThe game takes place in the fictional land of Athas, a dying and hostile desert world. The locale is Draj, a city-state ruled by a powerful sorcerer-king. Abandonware DOS structure changed during the last two major updates (summer 2015 and february 2016), it's possible that some URLs are now leading to nowhere.This includes cookies from third party websites. If you want to know more or if you wish to change cookie settings, please click here. If you continue browsing our website you're giving your consent to receive all cookies on this website and from third parties. HOW TO PLAY To scroll the screen, move the mouse There is no need to switch back and. Page 5: Adventuring and Combat 7 8. Character Interaction Camping you selected. To abort, right-click If you’re new to Athas, or just want. NPCs (non-player. Page 6 9 10Created Characters. Page 8: Creating Characters 13 14Open pouches and chests by can’t be cast by the character holding. Page 9 15 16. Page 10 17 18Page 11: CHARACTER OPTIONS 19 20. CHARACTER RACES warrior is conditioned to run quickly Half-giants stand between 10 and 12 MulsCHARACTER CLASSES Fighters Gladiators Rangers. Character classes reflect the interestsA Ability Requirement. Page 13: View Inventory 23 24. Preservers Clerics Clerics, cont. DruidsThieves Psionicists OTHER CHARACTERISTICS Lawful NeutralNeutral Evil Armor Class characters start with some base THACO. A character of this alignment insists Armor Class.Page 17: Collapse Party 31 32. ELEMENTAL, cont. GREATER SHADOWPage 18: ABILITY SCORES 33 34Page 20: Thri-kreen 37 38The night was chosenPage 30 57 58Page 31 59 60RANGE: 180 yards DURATION: Special AREA OF EFFECT: 1 target. Page 32 61 62Page 33 63 64Page 34 65 66Page 35 67 68Page 36: Monsters 69 70SPHERE: Earth RANGE: O DURATION: Instantaneous AREA OF EFFECT: Special SAVING. Page 37 71 72Page 38 73 74Page 39 75 76SPHERE: Cosmos RANGE: Touch DURATION: Permanent AREA OF EFFECT: Creature touched SAVING THROW. Page 40 77 78Page 41 79 80.http://dayalindia.com/userfiles/examples-of-chicago-manual-of-style-in-text-citation.xml
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PSIONICS PsychokinesisPage 42 81 82. PsychometabolismPage 43 83 84Page 44 85 86Page 45 87 88Page 46 89 90LEVEL ADVANCEMENT TABLES, cont. HotkeysPage 49 STRATEGIC SIMULATIONS, INC. Discover everything Scribd has to offer, including books and audiobooks from major publishers. Start Free Trial Cancel anytime.All rights re served. Please upgrade your browser to improve your experience. Add your vote The group finds themselves in the city of Tyr, which was recently freed from the reign of their evil king. However, now the city is vulnerable to the conquest of the Dragon. The ex-gladiators now find themselves embroiled in a fight to save the world from an even larger evil. Starting out you can either use a randomly generated team, create your own, or import from Shattered Lands. There are multiple races and classes to choose from, as well as important stats for each. The game borrows the engine and gameplay from the original while improving the graphics. The game uses a 3rd person bird’s-eye view to move your characters around and explore environments. Combat is turn-based and does not require the loading of a separate screen, it simply takes place wherever enemies are encountered. Wake of the Ravager has a much more linear storyline to follow. While you can roam somewhat freely, certain areas do not become accessible until you have completed certain tasks. There are also several side quests available if you don’t feel like following the story all the time.Most of them have been solved by patches.How do you feel about Wake of the Ravager. Let us know below.Click here. Obsidian Portal has a lot of really cool features that use JavaScript. You should check them out. We think you'll have a much more enjoyable experience. Download the Dark Sun Player's Guide for special setting rules for characters. Kalak, the Tyrant of Tyr, is hosting the greatest arena event the city has ever to inaugurate the completion of a towering ziggurat built in his honor.http://1stamericaninternetmarketing.com/userfiles/examples-manual-internal-controls.xml Some PCs will start the campaign as captives forced to fight in the headlining event while others will be spectators in the stands. Whether your PC is a fighter or audience member depends on their background, class, and the chaotic whims of the DM. Maybe your rogue would be the best choice for infiltrating a merchant emporium while your ranger is best for exploring the wastelands beyond the shelter of the city states. Whenever your active character gains a level so does one of your backup characters. The class options available to each class are listed here: Weapons made from these inferior materials have a tendency to break and armor becomes damaged over time. Metal arms and armor are treasured for their durability and increased effectiveness. Clerics draw power from the Elemental Planes, not gods. Wizards on the other hand must utilize the life force of plants to cast spells. Preserver wizards take only what energy they need while Defiler wizards destroy all plant life in an area in order to overcharge their spells. CommentsPlease. The site may not work properly if you don't update your browser. If you do not update your browser, we suggest you visit old reddit. Press J to jump to the feed. Press question mark to learn the rest of the keyboard shortcuts Log in sign up User account menu 36 Monster Manual - Dark Sun 5th Edition by Auquid I've seen some good MM for 5th edition - for example by Regerem ( ). But they mostly lacking monsters psionics and some unique abilities. So this why I've decided to create my own. Hope this will be helpful for others. Here're books from which monsters originated (ADnD 2nd edition): MC12 - Monstrous Compendium - Dark Sun Appendix I Monstrous Compendium - Dark Sun Appendix II. Really makes me want to play Dark Sun again. I'm gonna use it soon. And already fixed in updated version. I’ve been planning a 5E Dark Sun game for a while and I keep running into roadblocks where psionics are concerned - how have you handled that with your players. Also I'm giving other PCs one of Psionic Talents to spice things up. Civilized realms suffer under the oppressive rule of sorcerer-kings. Will you rise up, with allies to guard your back and your water. All rights reserved Back to top. Two factions vie for control of the troubled, leaderless city. Secrets murmur all around you. Be human, elf, dwarf or one of five other races; join a band of thieves or a mystic order of clerics (there is safety in numbers); take part in perilous quests; and converse over TEN with other players from near and far. The world is large, the story is deep, and your character is what you make of it. All the necessary files will be extracted to the DSO directory. Click the hand that reads GO to enter the Outer Sanctum. When you're ready, click ENTER to begin the character creation process. More Details Out of stock Product Details DETAILS User Guide Sample Settings Tech Specs Description (View User Guide Tab for Software updates). Dark Sun was crafted based on Mark Holcomb’s favorite sounds from the Andromeda Dynamic Delay and the Silver Lake Dynamic Reverb. Dark Sun combines a warm and clean digital delay algorithm with a lush Hall reverb, and the ability to route the two in just about any configuration you could want. And, you can shape the EQ of the effect, add saturation, or lush choral modulation, or use Dynamic Expression to control the mix of the effect with your playing. Setting Delay and Reverb to the left and right channels allows you to use Dark Sun’s two effects in stereo or as two separate pedals in one. A complement of filters, gain, and modulation round out the feature set. Applied only to the wet signal, they can totally re-shape the character of the effect. Use the Low Pass Filter to soften and warm up the sound, or the High Pass Filter to cut big low-end repeats, allowing you to use high mix settings without overpowering your playing. Saturation adds gain for pleasant lo-fi effects, tape-like saturation, or shoegaze-style distorted repeats. And, the modulation section can be assigned to the delay, the reverb, or both. Turn it on and play hard and the mix control is automatically ducked, so the delay and reverb get out of your way. When you play softer or let a note ring out, the mix level will rise again, swelling in ambient trails. It is fully MIDI capable, and features a micro-USB port for firmware updates and preset management. Like all Seymour Duncan pedals, Dark Sun was dreamed, designed, and built right here in the US, and features true-bypass switching. Extra Recollection This delay-only patch uses the Low Pass Filter, High Pass Filter, Saturation, and Modulation to emulate a beloved analog delay. Patterns Repeats at the quarter note and dotted eighth combine with reverb, soft chorus, and a subtle roll-off of lows and highs to make this hypnotic, rhythmic patch. Reverb Swells Large reverb in front of a reverse delay creates a dreamy reverse verb, with rolled off highs, heavy saturation, and deep, slow modulation. Brevifolia Dotted Eighth Delay with heavy roll offs in highs and lows, high saturation, and deep, slow modulation. Dynamic Expression helps keep it under control. Infinite Eights Maxed feedback and eighth note delay with high saturation creates a textural wash of repeats, reigned in by low mix settings and Dynamic Expression. Springy Short Reverb and Delay times combined with careful sculpting of the lows and highs creates this Spring Reverb simulation. Vibrato Too Using an ultra-short delay time and fully wet mix allows you to apply the modulation section to your playing in real time, creating this pleasing vibrato tone. Santa Barbara, California. All rights reserved. It all began in 2013 with an iPhone app, but after developing the Android version and creating a tribe of over 400,000 PhotoPillers across the world, PhotoPills is turning into something different, something more exciting. A movement of photographers that share the same vision: “To always be at the right place at the right time to capture the scenes we imagine.” PhotoPills is our crystal ball, our lightsaber. The tool that allows us to let our imagination fly and do all the planning to capture the photos we dream of. Imagine. Plan. Shoot! We created PhotoPills to help you go from ideas to real photos. To help you: Imagine, get inspired, be more creative, come up with different photo ideas with the Sun, the Moon, the Milky Way, Star Trails, Meteor Showers, Eclipses. Plan them, find the right shooting spot and right shooting date and time the scenes you imagine actually happen. So you can go and Shoot them, capture your own photo ideas. To achieve it, PhotoPills includes all you need: from sources of inspiration and learning to advanced planning tools and photography calculators. All of this will become clear as you read through this guide. Ready? “A goal without a plan is just a wish.” - Antoine de Saint-Exupery You can exercise, to the extent that they are applicable, all the rights established in the legislation on data protection. For more information on how we treat your data and in order to exercise your rights, click here. How to approach PhotoPills. Set a goal first! The three PhotoPills Menus (My Stuff, Pills and Academy) Tell us your pain and we’ll tell you the pill to take (problem vs. Congratulations! Because you’re here reading these lines, you’ve just entered the selected group of PhotoPillers that know the Widgets exist. Take advantage of it.:) Why you should use the PhotoPills Widgets PhotoPills Widgets - Sun, Light and Moon info on April 16, 2018 in Madrid, Spain. PhotoPills Widgets: Milky Way info and your five upcoming planned photos. The PhotoPills Widgets are a shortcut to the key Sun, Light, Moon and Milky Way information ( for the location you are and the date you are ): Sunrise and Sunset times. Current light type and remaining time to next light type (only in iOS). Golden hour, blue hour and astronomical twilight times. Moonrise and Moonset times. Moon phase. Galactic Center visibility times and position in the sky (Milky Way). Your five upcoming photo plans you’ve saved with the Planner. And they work offline. Therefore, no matter where you are in the world (even offline), to have a quick look at all the fresh daily information, you won’t even need to go to PhotoPills app. All you have to do is to enable the widgets. In iOS there are 3 different widgets: PhotoPills: Sun and Moon info. PhotoPills Night: Galactic Center visibility times and position. PhotoPills Plans: Your 5 upcoming photo plans you’ve saved with the Planner. In Android 5 different widgets: PhotoPills: Sun and Moon info, and the Galactic Center visibility times and position. Size: 4?4 cells. PhotoPills Moon: Moon info. Size: 4?1 cells. PhotoPills Sun: Sun info. Size: 4?2 cells. PhotoPills Galactic Center Visibility: Galactic Center visibility times and position. Size: 4?1 cells. PhotoPills Plans: Your 5 upcoming photo plans you’ve saved with the Planner. Size: 4?3 cells. The widgets are super useful and super easy to use. Enable them! How to enable and use the Widgets Watch this video to learn how to enable and use the PhotoPills Widgets on both, iOS and Android. Now that you have enabled the Widgets, read the next section before you even open PhotoPills. It’s important! How to approach PhotoPills. Set a goal first! This is key! The first time you open PhotoPills. Don’t try to master everything. It’s like trying to master all the buttons and options of your digital camera (or Lightroom or Photoshop) the first time you use it. You’ll feel overwhelmed and frustrated. Don’t do it. Instead, set a goal first. Do you want to know when the Sun sets today. Calculate the depth of field. Or plan a Milky Way photo idea you have? Set a goal. When you know what you want, it’s easier to use PhotoPills to find the answer. So, set a goal, come back to this guide, find the PhotoPills tool you need to use and learn how to use it. Finally, go to PhotoPills and get the answers. But let me go straight to the point. Open PhotoPills, we are going to explore the three menus together. The three PhotoPills Menus (My Stuff, Pills and Academy) PhotoPills has three main menus: Pills: Where you make all the calculations. My Stuff: Where you get inspired and access your stuff (plans, points of interest, etc.). Academy: Where you learn both, how to use PhotoPills and photography. You can change from one menu to the other by swiping the main menu right and left. And by tapping the name of the menu (at the top). Scroll up and down to see more options in the selected menu. Let’s have a quick look at the options within the menus. Pills (Menu) Planner It’s the most advanced planning tool. Use it to plan any Sun, Moon, Eclipse, Milky Way and Star Trails photo you imagine both from home and in the field. Exposure Use this calculator to work out the equivalent exposure time when shooting long exposures in low light, at night or when using ND filters. It also includes a timer and a table of exposure values. Depth of field (DoF) Get the depth of field information for a given camera settings, including: hyperfocal distance, total depth of field, DoF near limit an DoF far limit. You can visualize the depth of field info in three ways: on a table, on a picture and on the real world with the augmented reality view (AR). Field of View (FoV) Get the field of view information for a given camera settings, including: angle of view (horizontal, vertical and diagonal) and field of view (horizontal, vertical, diagonal). Visualize the FoV on a table, on a picture and on the reality with the augmented reality view (AR). Just tap on the AR view to see the frame on the real world, and see what you’d capture in the frame. Depth of field Table Get the depth of field information on a table. Hyperfocal Table Get the hyperfocal information on a table. Night AR Point your device at the sky and visualize all the key night information on the real world with the augmented reality view, including: Milky Way position, Galactic Center position, Moon position, Moon path, Moon phase, Polaris, south celestial pole, celestial equator and Star Trails patterns. Meteor Showers All you need to plan your Meteor Shower shots: Meteor Shower calendar, dates and local times of Meteor Shower peaks for the selected location, Meteor Shower visibility and quality (taking into account Moonlight and daylight) for your location, radiant information and position in the Augmented Reality view, detailed information for each Meteor Shower, Sunrise and Sunset times, Moonrise and Moonset times, number of hours with no Moon, Galactic Center visibility times (Milky Way). Star Trails Make Star Trails simulations and figure out the the exposure time you need for a desired Star Trails length, and vice versa. It includes a timer. Spot Stars Useful for Milky Way photography. Use it to calculate the maximum exposure time you can use in your night shots to prevent stars from trailing. To capture stars as big bright dots. Time lapse Make all your time lapse calculations in seconds: clip length, shooting interval, number of photos, total memory usage, etc. It includes a timer and a shooting interval table. Timer Use it when shooting Star Trails, time lapse and long exposures in low light, at night or with ND filters. Get a notification when the exposure time or total shooting time ends. Subject distance Calculate the minimum distance to fit a subject in the frame. Focal length match Calculate the focal length and aperture you need to use in a second camera (with different sensor size) to capture the same field of view and depth of field. My Stuff (Menu) Awards Welcome to the PhotoPills Awards. Get inspired by other PhotoPillers. Plans Your to-do list of planned photos. Here you’ll find the photos you’ve planned and saved with the Planner. Points of Interest Your list of points of interest (locations). Here you’ll find the points of interest you’ve saved with the Planner. Backup Make sure you backup your Plans and Points of Interest from time to time. It’ll create a KMZ file you can send to yourself by email. It also explains how to import your backup file onto PhotoPills. Settings Personalize PhotoPills: units (metric, imperial), sync Plans and Points of Onterest with iCloud (only on iOS), aperture stop scale (full, half, third), elevation service provider, azimuth (true north, magnetic north), etc. Academy (Menu) User Guide Download this manual in PDF format or read it online. Video Tutorials Videos to help you master PhotoPills. “How To” articles Articles to help you master photography. T-Shirts Our funny T-Shirts. The Team Meet the four friends behind the PhotoPills Team: German Marques (the Developer), Joan Pons (the Designer), Antoni Cladera (The Photographer) and Rafael Pons (the Bard). Rate the app Rate PhotoPills on the App Store or on Google Play. Feedback Send us suggestions, bugs, complaints. We’re continuously improving PhotoPills. We need your feedback. Glossary The glossary contains all the terms used in PhotoPills, including: azimuth, elevation, angular diameter, depth of field, etc. Well, now that you have a global vision of the tools you can find in PhotoPills. Let me tell you which tool to use depending on the question you have. Keep reading! Tell us your pain and we’ll tell you the Pill to take (problem vs.We chose the name PhotoPills as a wink to the medical world. Because our main purpose is to cure all the pains you have when planning and shooting your creative ideas: from lack of inspiration, planning the shots and making all the calculations when shooting to learning and improving your photography. So we locked ourselves in our laboratory for three long years and engineered a pill for every pain photographers have. Use it to plan any photo you imagine involving natural light, shadows, the Sun, the Moon, a Solar Eclipse, a Lunar Eclipse, a Meteor Shower or the Milky Way for any location on Earth. So, open PhotoPills and go to the Planner (Pills). Now, before I explain you all the elements and options of the Planner, it’s important you understand the logic behind planning a photo. Introduction to planning The planning work consists in finding the right shooting spot and right shooting date and time the scene you imagine happens. Therefore, to plan a photo you need to know where the Sun, the Moon, the Eclipse, the radiant of a Meteor Shower or the Milky Way will be for a given location, date and time. And here is when the Planner makes things much easier. You have two ways of planning a shot with the Planner: When you know the date of the shooting (or planning day by day) This is the most common workflow. It’s when you know the date you wish to go shooting and need to find the right shooting spot and shooting time. For example, when you wish to photograph the Sunset next Sunday, or the next Full Moon, or a determined Eclipse, or the next important Meteor Shower peak or the Milky Way during the next new Moon. In this case, the Planner allows you to: Choose a date and time, by using the Time Bar (the colorful bar below the Map). Visualize the key light, shadows, Sun, Moon, Eclipse, Meteor Shower and Milky Way information both on the Map and the Top Panels (above the Map). And choose a shooting spot, by moving the Red Pin you see on the Map. Then, you keep changing the shooting spot (Red Pin) and the shooting time until you find the photo you want. And if the photo you want is not happening on that date, just try another date. Watch this video to see an example of the workflow to plan the Moon aligned with a building: Plan 6. Full Moon at the top of the Sky Tower, Auckland (New Zealand). And watch this video tutorial to see an example of this workflow to plan the Milky Way: Plan 3. Milky Way arching above the Vingerklip, Damaraland (Namibia). You know the photo you want and need to figure out when the Sun or the Moon will be in a determined position in the frame. For example, on top of a building. In this case you need to: Place the Red Pin on the desired shooting spot. And use the Find option (at the bottom left-hand corner) to find the shooting date and time. But let’s slow down a bit. Because before you can start planning, you need to master all the elements of the Planner. Let’s have a look at the different parts of the Planner. The 4 parts of the Planner The Planner has 4 parts: Top Panels, Map, Time Bar and Bottom options. Top Panels Swipe right or left to go from one Panel to another. Here you’ll find all the key light, Sun, Moon, Milky Way, Shadows, Geodetic (terrain topography) Meteor Shower and Eclipse information for the position of the Red Pin and the selected date and time. Panel 1 Shadow length calculator. Button to switch on the Shadows info layer on the Map. Watch the video tutorial. Panel 2 Pin to Pin Geodetic info. Take into account topography. Button to switch on the Black Pin on the Map. Sun, Moon, Milky Way arch and Galactic Center altitude above Black Pin ground level. Moon phase info. Button to switch on the Sun info layer and the Moon info layer on the Map. Moon phase picture (tap it to jump time to the next important Moon phase). Panel 5 Twilight times (civil, nautical, astronomical). Button to switch on the Twilights layer on the Map. Panel 6 Magic hours times (golden hour, blue hour). Panel 7 Galactic Center visibility (Milky Way). Button to switch on the Milky Way layer on the Map. Panel 8 Milky Way quality and position. Milky Way position picture (tap it to jump time to the next new Moon). Panel 9 Eclipse information (date, type, magnitude). Button to select the eclipse. And switch on the Eclipse layer on the Map. Panel 10 Eclipse phases times. Picture of the eclipse phase (tap it to jump time to the next phase). Button to select the Meteor Shower and switch on the Meteor Shower layer on the Map. Map Red Pin The shooting spot. Place the Red Pin on the location you wish to plan a shot. During the planning, you’ll change the position of the Red Pin until you find the right shooting spot for the photo you wish to take. Black Pin You switch the Black Pin on from Panel 2 (Pin to pin geodetic info). Place it on your subject or any place you wish to measure the elevation angle relative to the Red Pin. It helps you understand terrain topography when planning a shot. Map information Visualize on the Map the key Sun, Moon, Milky Way, Twilights, Shadows, Geodetic and Eclipse information layers for the position of the Red Pin and the selected date and time. You control what you see on the Map with the Map Settings button and top Panels. Oh! And you can rotate the Map!! Time Bar Use the Time Bar to change the date and time. If you know the date of the shooting, set it using the Time Bar (for example, when you wish to plan the next full Moon). Bottom options Find Use the Find option to figure out when the Sun or Moon will be where you want it to be in the frame. Augmented Reality view (AR) Use the AR option to visualize the position and path of the Sun and Moon for the position of the Red Pin and the selected date and time. Night Augmented Reality view (Night AR) Use the Night AR option to Visualize the position of the Milky Way (and the Star Trails pattern) for the position of the Red Pin and the selected date and time. Load Use the Load option to load a saved photo Plan. Save Use the Save option to save a photo Plan or a Point of Interest to your list. Useful when you’re shooting from top of a great mountain. Watch the video tutorial. 3. Planner - Top Panels Swipe right or left to go from one Panel to another. Panel 1: Shadow length calculator See Panel 1 above the Map view. Read on the Panel, subject height and shadow length for the selected date, time and Red Pin position. Also notice the lighthouse shadow length on the Map (black segment aligned with the Sun azimuth thin orange line). Use this Panel when planning to include the shadow of an object in your photo. Place the Red Pin on your subject, swipe the top Panels to set Panel 1, set your subject height (Favaritx lighthouse is 28 meters tall), tap the Shadow button (on the Panel) and get the shadow length (on the Panel and on the Map) cast by your subject as you change time with the Time Bar. This is the information you’ll find on this Panel: Shadow calculator Introduce the object's height to calculate its shadow length for the selected date, time and Red Pin position. Shadow button Tap on the shadow button to visualize on the Map the length and azimuth (direction) of the shadow cast by an object placed in the location of the Red Pin, caused by the Sun (daytime) or the Moon (nighttime), for the selected date and time. Note: You can also switch on the Shadow layer by using the Map settings button. Shadow length calculator enabled Shadow length calculator disabled Recommended video tutorial: Shadow length calculator Panel. Panel 2: Pin to pin geodetic info (Black Pin) See Panel 2 just above the Map. The Black Pin has been placed on the subject to plan a Moon shot. Take into account topography (and the height of a building) in your planning. Use this Panel to find out: Whether the Moon, the Sun, the Milky Way arch (the highest point on the Milky Way) or the Galactic Center will be visible above the Black Pin ground level. The altitude of the Moon, the Sun, the Milky Way arch (the highest point on the Milky Way) or the Galactic Center above the Black Pin ground Level. If needed, you can compare this altitude with the height of a building when planning your shots. The size of the Sun or the Moon you’ll get at the Black Pin distance. Then, tap the button on the Panel (icon of the Red Pin and Black Pin). A Black Pin will appear on the Map. Azimuth between Pins The bearing or the angle centred on the Red Pin location and measured between the direction of the Black Pin and the north. Altitude difference between Pins Measured from the ground level. It does not take into account the height of a building. This is the Black Pin Altitude minus the Red Pin altitude. It’s negative when the Black Pin is below the Red Pin. The elevation angle of the Black Pin relative to the Red Pin Measured from the ground level. This is the altitude above the Black Pin ground level. This way it is super easy to know if the Moon, the Sun or the Milky Way is at the elevation you need above the terrain (or a building). It shows the real Size of the Moon or the Sun. Black Pin enabled Black Pin disabled Black Pin Recommended video tutorial: Pin to Pin geodetic info Panel. And the Moon phase info. On the Map, the thin blue line tells you the position of the Moon for the selected date and time. And the thin orange line, tells you the position of the Sun for the selected date and time. The thick ones are the sunrise (yellow), Sunset (orange), Moonrise (light blue) and Moonset (dark blue) directions. Mainly use this Panel when planning a long distance shot with the Moon.