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😂
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ОтветитьFun. Loving the videos. Very helpful. It’s good to see how all the alternative recipes work together. And the extra research into power consumption was very helpful as I’m trying to keep power demand to a bare minimum because I’m trying to only use biomass burners for all electricity production. Subbed to. Off to watch another one! 👍
ОтветитьFun^
ОтветитьMy pre-1.0 base location did, in fact have copper, iron and coal in the same area, so I tended to make copper rotors and stators before splitting the line to some motors in the same area. Granted with iron pipes, a pure iron route is suddenly much more viable. Should make things FUN, I think.
ОтветитьLooks FUN to me
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Ответитьwhen you start making everything from iron the pure iron ingot from refineries becomes more and more worth it. sadly i didn't see the value of that discovery when i first saw it and haven't seen it sense. hopefully one of my harddrive hunts i will see it again.
ОтветитьGood FUN video. I like the inclusion of power cost as a point of comparison.
ОтветитьThe secret is to have FUN! 😁
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Ответитьfun
lol
Good stuff, thanks for the research it's always FUN to watch
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ОтветитьFinaly foUnd Nice one
ОтветитьIt is FUN to know there is other ways to do the same thing. LOVE IT
ОтветитьAre you using some noise cancelling microphone setting? Your voice fades in at the beginning of each sentence.
ОтветитьFun! This was a surprising result honestly.
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Ответитьcompletely aside from the space, power, or resource requirements, like others have said, i always prefer the Steel Rotor alternate just because it combines so easily with the stators requirements, leading directly into motors.... which, honestly, are much more needed that rotors or stators.
also, "fun".
I enjoy your best recipe series, it is FUN to watch.
Ответитьngl building a smaller iron parts factory and using the steel rotor recipe a month back was quite Fun to do
ОтветитьFUN
- Forskarföreningen Umeå Naturvetare...
This was FUN experiment
ОтветитьI've been having a lot of FUN lately using sushi belts on my factories and screws can really screw with the throughput so any alt-recipe that removes them are A-Okay with me
ОтветитьI think, base recipe with steel rod and solid steel ingot better (18.75 iron ingot, 18.75 coal, 77.6MW)
ОтветитьThis time including power. It's such a difference. Also, space and pacing to use it together with other recipes.
And, for me at least, the amount of pre products is important as I currently love to use a sushi belt so I don't have to do the dirty work and unaesthetic looks of crossing belts for assemblers and foundry.
Just a last addition:
As iron + copper was on the table (copper rotor): Using the foundry with Iron Allow + steel rotor is super strong for spaces with the matching relation and mutliple products. 10 Cu/s + 40 Fe/s -> 75 Iron Ingots / second. That's quite good, needs no refinery, not pipes and Copper + Iron is quite common to find.
As far as fun, one recommendation I would have is to show all the recipes near the end in one compact view
ОтветитьYeah I always watch to the end for the FUN. Some great content here.
ОтветитьFun
ОтветитьFUN :)
ОтветитьThis will be FUN to work into my factory.
ОтветитьFUN😂
Ответитьi would have expected the steel rotor was the obvious choice
ОтветитьIt would be FUN to find out which recipes get the highest output as a % of input materials if you can use Somersloops everywhere
ОтветитьFun breakdown. It's neat how similar the machine requirements are to a 10pm Modular Frame blueprint using the Steeled Frame, Stiched Iron Plate, and Iron Wire alternates.
ОтветитьThe biggest roadblock I'm hitting now is planning how to layout my factory - I'm in the dune desert and have mostly 'bushwhacked' my way to geothermal power (I'm still in phase 2) and got the power augmenter, but am just stumped as to what to start setting up. I'd like to start putting something futureproofed and compact up, because implementing efficient builds to the puzzle is honestly more satisfying, it keeps the game FUN.
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ОтветитьHad a FUN time watching this!!
Great video!!
Love the alternate recipe vids ❤. Helping me a great deal to plan new factories. FUN & subscribed. Very good content! Keep it up! 👍🏻
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ОтветитьI do prefer Steel Rotor because it doesn't use screws and uses the same parts as the Stators making belting easier early on. FUN!
ОтветитьThanks for this great video series. Really enjoying it and find it very useful. Any chance you could publish the Schematics you show in the video in PDF form? Possible with an annotation (best for resources, uses more power etc.)?
ОтветитьThank you for doing recipe vids. I like steel rotors and use that recipe for motors. I like copper rotors too. Copper rotors would require copper alloy ingot and steel screws. Then upgrade to a wet factory plus steamed sheets and steel screws.
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