Difference between revisions of "Water Mill"

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(Deleted info about water towers, coz it's no longer working.)
m (Just fixing some grammar, I have OCD.)
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|stackable=Yes (64)
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The ''Water Mill'' produces [[EU]] by either having a [[Water Bucket]] placed in its lower slot.
The ''Water Mill'' produces [[EU]] by having a [[Water Bucket]] placed in its lower slot.





Revision as of 16:02, 18 February 2012

Water Mill
Water Mill ig.png
Grid Water Mill.png
Properties
Type Generator
Tool Grid Wrench.png




Stackable Yes (64)






Technical Details
UU Cost {{{uu_cost}}}
First appearance ?
ID IC2:{{{id}}}


The Water Mill produces EU by having a Water Bucket placed in its lower slot.


Recipe[edit]

Grid Stick.png
Grid Wooden Planks.png
Grid Stick.png
Grid Wooden Planks.png
Grid Generator.png
Grid Wooden Planks.png
Grid Stick.png
Grid Wooden Planks.png
Grid Stick.png
Grid Water Mill.png

Water Mill

Water Mill


Usage[edit]

Place Water Buckets in the lower slot (or place the Water Mill inside water), and optionally an RE Battery in the upper slot. The Water Mill will charge the battery or output power at a rate of 2 EU/t (manned) or 0.010 EU/t per block of adjacent water (unmanned). The maximum output of an unmanned Water Mill is 0.25EU/t (3x3x3 cube of water with the mill in the middle, plus 1 piece of cable to direct the energy = 25 water tiles).

Note: Water Cells do not work in Water Mills

Grid RE Battery.png
Grid Water Bucket.png





Energy[edit]

EU
Input Water Buckets
Output Manned: 2 EU/t
<
Storage N/A

Water Towers (No longer working)[edit]

A Water Mill on its own will produce very little EU if left unmanned, even when completely surrounded in water. So it's better to build compact clusters of them. A 'water tower' is one of many methods.

A water tower is a number of watermills, usually stacked, such that they all feed to the same energy storage device and are surrounded by water. For best results, arrange the tower sections so that there's at least a one block layer of water around each watermill. Below is an example of a horizontal layer of a watermill.

Watermill example 1.png

Detailed Mechanics (No longer working)[edit]

A Water Mill only uses water that directly surrounds it (a 3x3x3 box with the Water Mill in the center). Each block of water adds roughly 0 EU/s to its overall output.

Using the water tower design from above will result in each Water Mill being surrounded by 21 water blocks like so:

Watermill example 2.png

21 * 0.010 = 0.21 EU/t from each watermill, meaning roughly 2.3 EU/t from each tower section (11 watermills)

Some notes about the behavior of some Water Mills that were studied:

  • Water Mills can 'share' the same water block with seemingly no effect.
  • Using flowing water instead of still water had no noticeable effect.
  • A Water Mill suspended over water will still react to the water below it even though the watermill is not visibly touching the water.
  • Water Mills are not noticeably affected by rainfall.