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Steam version 0.13.17 with two mods longreach and research queue.
Kind of, yes. But the reason it is a bad idea is that you are then relying on a lot of electricity to supply your powerplant with water needed for electricity generation. If you overdraw from your powerplant (lasers starts firing or you expand your base before your power plant) then your pumps won't get enough power to pump water to your boilers... and then you produce even less power... and then your pumps stop completely.axelsword wrote:That would make the small pump a bad shut-off valve then?
2 small pumps for each offshore pump. Placed in parallel. In series it won't help. But no small pumps at all is even better.axelsword wrote:Would 3 or 4 small pumps remedy the situation?
That would be very slow. Instead you should disconnect your steam power plant from your main grid and connect it through a power switch. It is instant.axelsword wrote:Maybe I should turn off the coal belt to control steam power. Thank you!
It shouldn't ever really happen that the Burner Inserters on a fuel line run out of energy, as they self-feed before attempting to feed the Boiler behind them. The only way that happens is if you're belt is too fast for the inserter (this is a problem easily avoided by laying things out in a way so that you can use yellow belts anywhere inserters are actually needing to pull from without that becoming a throughput bottleneck).Deadly-Bagel wrote:Personally I don't like the use of burner inserters for pumps. If the coal runs out (extended biter hunting trip maybe) and the burner inserters themselves run out of fuel, it's tedious to get it all kickstarted again as you have to either replace all your burner inserters or put some coal in them (I had this happen on my no solar power run). Using electric inserters you only need to drop coal in a few boilers and the whole system starts moving slowly, and you can use long inserters to transfer from boiler to boiler for a more compact setup.
If you wanted I'm sure you could have some sort of setup with a power switch where if the boilers power off it cuts power to your factory until an accumulator starts charging again, maybe reaches 100%. This ensures your inserters get 100% of the power to at least get some coal to all your boilers (or most if using long inserters to transfer between boilers) in the shortest time possible. Personally I prefer solar with steam engines as a backup so this generally isn't a problem.
If you use straight yellow belts then the burner inserters can't possibly run out of fuel. Use burner inserters.Deadly-Bagel wrote:Personally I don't like the use of burner inserters for pumps. If the coal runs out (extended biter hunting trip maybe) and the burner inserters themselves run out of fuel, it's tedious to get it all kickstarted again as you have to either replace all your burner inserters or put some coal in them (I had this happen on my no solar power run). Using electric inserters you only need to drop coal in a few boilers and the whole system starts moving slowly, and you can use long inserters to transfer from boiler to boiler for a more compact setup.
In my experience this happens when you had a severe coal shortage and resulting powerloss. If not enough Coal is being supplied (or too much being sent elsewhere than to your boilers, you can get into a situation where your miners aren't producing enough Coal because their underpowered...and their underpowered because you're not producing enough Coal. The best fix is to temporarily cut off any sidings of the Coal line, so that 100% of it is going to the boilers. Soon enough (non-trivial amount of time here, but not ages), things will be 'back to normal' and then you reconnect other coal consumers.Deadly-Bagel wrote:Is indeed strange but as I said I had it happen. Is there a small passive drain on burner inserters? I assume so. What had happened was first few boilers had eaten all the coal so something like the rest of them just passively burned through their stored fuel and died, had to restock them all manually after fixing the coal problem. Was a real pain.
Might be a fringe condition, I think half my miners suddenly ran out but as most of my factory was idle the few active boilers could keep it operational. When I eventually went to check why I was only on 90% power I had a bit of a shock lol.
They are right and you are wrong, I'm afraid. I only accepted this as a non-bug, myself, a week or two ago, after discussing it with some smart folks here at the forums.Qon wrote: If you use straight yellow belts then the burner inserters can't possibly run out of fuel. Use burner inserters.
Yes, what I said was wrong, you are right. It is at least possible to deliberatly construct something where half the inserters run out of fuel if you do all of these:golfmiketango wrote:They are right and you are wrong, I'm afraid. I only accepted this as a non-bug, myself, a week or two ago, after discussing it with some smart folks here at the forums.Qon wrote: If you use straight yellow belts then the burner inserters can't possibly run out of fuel. Use burner inserters.
I've not seen the event happening myself. But I have seen the results in my own game. I had a single yellow belt, with a single row of 14 burner inserters with boilers. Coal had run almost dry and 4 of the burners had stopped with an out-of-energy notification. Nothing fancy here, not even inserters from both sides of the belt.golfmiketango wrote: Simply stated, it is somewhat rare, but they most definitely can and will run out of fuel. Once it happens, resupplying the belt will not cause them to re-bootstrap themselves. They stay stopped, unless you have additional burner inserters, inserting fuel into your burner inserters (which actually does work -- but then what happens when your burner-inserter-burner-inserters run out?, etc. -- so it's burner inserters all the way down and this doesn't solve the problem, at least not in and of itself).
I don't know exactly what are the right conditions to cause them to run out -- I've never seen the "event" itself, only the tragic result -- a row of stopped burner inserters, all poised to feed a row of cold boilers, but all flashing red "no fuel" indicators, sat right next to an idle, straight, dead-end, yellow belt, jammed to full compression with nothing but coal.