![]() Usually, you will NOT need a lot of these. Stone into bricks, just use the same design you have for iron and copper. You might also like to build a small furnace column for smelting loose If you use enough chests toĪctually stockpile 10,000 steel plates, that’s probably overkill. However, there willĪlso be a lot of steel on your bus system, as well. That’s the maximum number of steel you should stockpile. Of 10,000 steel plates to make enough low density structures for one launch. If you’re really, really worried about your rocket, you need a total Time your furnaces aren’t actually producing anything. Producing, any excess will build up in the chests. Basically whenever your bus isn’t using all the steel you’re If you reallyĭon’t like waiting, you can put some chests down and build up a bit of a More steel (assuming you have enough iron ore coming in). You’ll be fine.Īfter all, even if you start to run out of steel before launching a rocketĪt end-game, worst case scenario, it’s only a matter of time until you get some Probably won’t need a fully compressed belt of steel. Needed to launch a rocket and “finish” the game. The most "steelĮxpensive” item will be “low density structures”. One or two lines are more than enough for now. If you want two lines of steel on the belt). Now youĬan either leave enough room for a grand total of five columns (or ten Since one steel plate takes five iron ones, for one fully compressed belt of Now how many furnace columns should you make for steel? Well, technically Sure they grab coal from the correct belt and all the steel is put on its own, You will need to alternate the directions on the inserters to make Since the inner row of furnaces need coal too, these are absolutely ![]() And do note the coal line running through the middle You can use a similar design to the iron one, just with two rows ofįurnaces in the middle. True, but smelting one steel plate also takes five times as long as a single iron plate. “But one steel plate requires five iron plates”, you might object. The first one smelts ore into iron plates and then an inserter grabs those and directly feeds it into the next one. But instead of pulling iron form your other set of furnaces, I like to use two rows of furnaces and supply them with iron ore of theri own. Now steel is made by putting iron plates in a furnace again. The next furnace line you’ll need is for steel.
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