Thanks for explaining Blokus. Much better worded than i could've.Blokus wrote: Mon Jun 03, 2019 2:29 pmThe point is that from that math, you want to use the raw + hot air recipe rather than doing the cleaning step at all, to optimize the use of the raw nexelit. This is kind of a pervasive theme with hot air at the moment, often the most basic recipe with hot air included beats out the medium complexity recipes. This happens with glass for example; until quartz 2 research, you're better off just hitting quartz ore with hot air than you are going through any of the crushed quartz options.kingarthur wrote: Mon Jun 03, 2019 2:24 pmeverything looks fine to me. anything with hot air gets a +2 outputMithaldu wrote: Mon Jun 03, 2019 1:49 pm Hot Air doesn't interact correctly with Nexelit.
yield: 0.2 - 5 raw nex -> 1 nex plate
yield: 0.33 - 18 raw nex -> 6 clean nex -> 6 nex plate
yield: 0.6 - 5 raw nex + hot air -> 3 nex plate
yield: 0.44 - 18 raw nex -> 6 clean nex + hot air -> 8 nex plate
I did the math on those as well, and due to the stark difference hot air makes for raw nex vs clean nex, it's still more effective to ignore the cleaning step, especially when one uses tailings as a nex source in the first place.Blokus wrote: Mon Jun 03, 2019 2:29 pm Though in this particular example it is a little bit more complicated because you can replenish some of the raw nexelit you spent in the cleaning step by evaporating the tailings into raw nexelit.