The bigger the structure is, the more slots to smelt items there will be. The more it has to smelt per stack, the longer it takes to melt. The Seared Furnace can smelt up to a quarter stack(16) of items at once. Put the items you want to smelt into the controller. To operate a Seared Furnace there has to be fuel in the Seared Tank. You need to have at least 1 Seared Tank or Gauge for the furnace to work, but more than 1 will also work. Fill it with a hot liquid such as lava, and it will provide fuel for smelting. Seared Tanks and Gauges are used to provide fuel to the furnace. Any blocks that work for building a smeltery will work with building a furnace with the exception of Seared Glass. Seared Blocks are used for building the main structure of the Seared Furnace. The furnace controller is created using one furnace surrounded by eight individual Seared Bricks. The furnace controller provides the player with a User Interface to interact with the furnace. A Seared Furnace Controller, a Seared Tank, and Seared Brick blocks. Seared Furnaces require three different types of blocks. Functionally, the Seared Furnace replaces having a wall of furnaces by allowing the user to process quarter stacks of items in each slot of the furnace and having only one interface. Ofc Lava pools or fire(stand-in for embers), RC Smokers, Chimneys, Iron block(maybe steel) ducts etc.The Seared Furnace is a multi-block structure used for processing large quantities of material. All caked in a layer of dirt, smoke and sooth Something like the mix of styles you could experience in some of the last smithies where they still had all the old traditional tools, but also started using water/steam power(belts, shafts etc) and later electrical appliances. Thought of adding a second smeltery to this room with proper casting tables and some clever setup for all the tool stuff.įor this I have been thinking of going for a modernised traditional forge style. that either HAVE to be operated manually or that are simply handy to have for manual access. I don't use TiCo tools much, so the Smeltery either gets a obscure "out of the way" place or end up in my "processing and crafting" machine room and gets hooked up to ME to autosmelt Clear Glass and Drawbridge parts.īut I have recently been developing an idea of a "manual workshop" (something I usually don't have) housing all kinds of machines, crafting tables etc. I want ideas/inspiration for designing a TiCon smeltery, both the smeltery itself and the building it will go in. maybe a medieval-esque blacksmith with a chimney ? I'd love to see your guys' pics and building styles for inspiration.I debated putting this in community showcase because of this but decided against it. Basicly I want to know if anyone has some nice smeltery designs, both the smeltery itself, automation tactics, and aesthetics for the building surrounding it. At this point I ALWAYS end up asking myself "What does a smeltery building look like ?" Many youtube vids and google image search seem to tell me that most people throw aesthetics out the window just like I do at first and put their smelteries wherever is most convenient. Sometimes this is a factory of sorts, this time I'd like to make it a general purpose weapon, tool & armor creation room/building with armor stands etc. After a few more days, I end up wanting to house the smeltery in some sort of nifty building. This is because in my pack especially, this is a requirement for progression and the first method of increasing ore materials. Everytime I start a new world/pack, I end up slapping a TiCon smeltery together as fast as possible in the first flat area I see.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |