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Difference between revisions of "40d:Obsidian farming"
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Magma is routed to flow directly into the lowest area, using doors/floodgates of [[magma-safe]] materials linked to a [[lever]] with a [[bauxite]] [[mechanism]] to turn the flow on/off. Only a depth of 2/7 is needed (1/7 can work, but can also [[evaporate]] before the water is added, causing problems later - 2/7 to 3/7 is perhaps a good target to start with). | Magma is routed to flow directly into the lowest area, using doors/floodgates of [[magma-safe]] materials linked to a [[lever]] with a [[bauxite]] [[mechanism]] to turn the flow on/off. Only a depth of 2/7 is needed (1/7 can work, but can also [[evaporate]] before the water is added, causing problems later - 2/7 to 3/7 is perhaps a good target to start with). | ||
− | The water reservoir is built 2 z-levels above this with a controlled inflow of water (more linked doors/floodgates), sized to provide just enough water to cover the magma area below at a depth of between 1/7* and 2/7*, to fully cover the magma but allow for [[evaporation]]. The floor of this reservoir is channeled out and replaced with one or more retractable bridges, linked to a (single) lever, to drop the water all at once. | + | The water reservoir is built 2 z-levels above this with a controlled inflow of water (more linked doors/floodgates), sized to provide just enough water to cover the magma area below at a depth of between 1/7* and 2/7*, to fully cover the magma but allow for [[evaporation]]. The floor of this reservoir is channeled out and replaced with one or more retractable bridges, linked to a (single) lever, to drop the water all at once. It is not necessary that the amount/depths of water and magma be balanced, only the area. |
:''(* The math works like this: Determine the size of the magma level, the number of tiles you want to cover in water between 1/7 and 2/7 when the bridge drops the water. (Better a few too many than a few too few!) Multiply that by 1.5 (average of 1/7 and 2/7). Divide that by 7, and round up to the nearest whole number. This gives the number of 7/7 tiles for your water reservoir. '' | :''(* The math works like this: Determine the size of the magma level, the number of tiles you want to cover in water between 1/7 and 2/7 when the bridge drops the water. (Better a few too many than a few too few!) Multiply that by 1.5 (average of 1/7 and 2/7). Divide that by 7, and round up to the nearest whole number. This gives the number of 7/7 tiles for your water reservoir. '' | ||
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One Z-level below the reservoir and above the magma a "working area" should remain empty for your future obsidian miners, covering the full area beneath the bridges plus a single row 'ledge' on at least one side (left/west is best). Access to the digging level is only required from this on this mid-level, and lockable or linked doors are ''strongly'' suggested. | One Z-level below the reservoir and above the magma a "working area" should remain empty for your future obsidian miners, covering the full area beneath the bridges plus a single row 'ledge' on at least one side (left/west is best). Access to the digging level is only required from this on this mid-level, and lockable or linked doors are ''strongly'' suggested. | ||
− | The area beneath this access area, the lowest, should be channeled | + | The area beneath this access area, the lowest, should be channeled out - this is where the magma will be poured, prior to water being added. The easiest/safest ways to do this are one row at a time, from east to west, or by digging ramps and then removing them all. The ledge allows the last row of the whole area to be easily channeled. In-flow of magma into this area is best if kept simple - just put in some gates and dig out a path. If obsidian is created in the middle work level (rather than in the lowest magma level), the water-reservoir bridges will be destroyed when that middle level is channeled out, requiring a re-building process. |
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The process then is: | The process then is: | ||
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:* Fill lowest level (only!) with magma, at least 2/7. | :* Fill lowest level (only!) with magma, at least 2/7. | ||
:* (Close magma gate(s) if you have them.) | :* (Close magma gate(s) if you have them.) | ||
− | :* Drop water from reservoir. | + | :* Drop water from reservoir. ''(Inflow to reservoir should be sealed to prevent excess flooding.)'' |
− | :* Once water has turned all magma to obsidian, open access to middle area | + | :* Once water has turned all magma to obsidian, open access to middle area for workers. |
:* Channel out obsidian, begin hauling (if no bauxite gates are used (see below), do '''NOT''' channel "plug" yet!) | :* Channel out obsidian, begin hauling (if no bauxite gates are used (see below), do '''NOT''' channel "plug" yet!) | ||
:* Refill upper water reservoir while harvesting operations are ongoing | :* Refill upper water reservoir while harvesting operations are ongoing |
Revision as of 20:37, 9 August 2009
By mixing magma and water, dwarves can produce obsidian, a highly valued material. This process can be dangerous, but the dangers can be minimized if approached carefully. It's advised that players research this before proceeding if they want to avoid too much fun all at once.
If you have a magma pipe (not a magma pool!) and an inexhaustible source of water, you can produce an infinite supply of obsidian by setting up an area for magma to flow (and later the obsidian to be dug/channeled out), and for water to be poured on top of it, creating the obsidian. The trick is to use only as much magma and water as necessary, so deep water does not prevent dwarves from working in "dangerous terrain", and the magma pipe has time to refill between harvests.
There are as many designs for "farming" obsidian as there are players who do it. Below is a basic plan; improvements are up to you and your imagination.
basic approach
There are 3 levels to the standard obsidian "farm"; the lowest for magma/obsidian, the middle for dwarves to dig down and channel the obsidian out once it's been created, and the upper-most for a water reservoir. This is basically all one open area - no floors exist between the levels.
Level +2 ~~~~ <- water reservoir Level +1 <- work area & access for miners for channeling Level 0 xxxxxx <- magma/obsidian
SIDE VIEW
Magma is routed to flow directly into the lowest area, using doors/floodgates of magma-safe materials linked to a lever with a bauxite mechanism to turn the flow on/off. Only a depth of 2/7 is needed (1/7 can work, but can also evaporate before the water is added, causing problems later - 2/7 to 3/7 is perhaps a good target to start with).
The water reservoir is built 2 z-levels above this with a controlled inflow of water (more linked doors/floodgates), sized to provide just enough water to cover the magma area below at a depth of between 1/7* and 2/7*, to fully cover the magma but allow for evaporation. The floor of this reservoir is channeled out and replaced with one or more retractable bridges, linked to a (single) lever, to drop the water all at once. It is not necessary that the amount/depths of water and magma be balanced, only the area.
- (* The math works like this: Determine the size of the magma level, the number of tiles you want to cover in water between 1/7 and 2/7 when the bridge drops the water. (Better a few too many than a few too few!) Multiply that by 1.5 (average of 1/7 and 2/7). Divide that by 7, and round up to the nearest whole number. This gives the number of 7/7 tiles for your water reservoir.
- Some players have a "measuring" reservoir that then dumps water onto the bridge reservoir for even distribution - see below. Others use hatches or multiple smaller bridges to spread the water out across a wider area. As mentioned above, there are many, many different tweaks and "improvements" to this design.)
One Z-level below the reservoir and above the magma a "working area" should remain empty for your future obsidian miners, covering the full area beneath the bridges plus a single row 'ledge' on at least one side (left/west is best). Access to the digging level is only required from this on this mid-level, and lockable or linked doors are strongly suggested.
The area beneath this access area, the lowest, should be channeled out - this is where the magma will be poured, prior to water being added. The easiest/safest ways to do this are one row at a time, from east to west, or by digging ramps and then removing them all. The ledge allows the last row of the whole area to be easily channeled. In-flow of magma into this area is best if kept simple - just put in some gates and dig out a path. If obsidian is created in the middle work level (rather than in the lowest magma level), the water-reservoir bridges will be destroyed when that middle level is channeled out, requiring a re-building process.
The process then is:
- Clear all dwarves from area, lock/seal all access doors. (Not actually necessary, but strongly recommended!)
- Fill lowest level (only!) with magma, at least 2/7.
- (Close magma gate(s) if you have them.)
- Drop water from reservoir. (Inflow to reservoir should be sealed to prevent excess flooding.)
- Once water has turned all magma to obsidian, open access to middle area for workers.
- Channel out obsidian, begin hauling (if no bauxite gates are used (see below), do NOT channel "plug" yet!)
- Refill upper water reservoir while harvesting operations are ongoing
- repeat
Note that a ramp can be dug for the haulers, or doors built on the lowest level. These do not need to be magma-safe (as they are not "submerged" in magma), but the obsidian in front of them must be channeled free for them to open. It is (again) strongly recommended that these are locked or link and shut while the magma is flowing.
no bauxite
For a no-bauxite-necessary method of producing obsidian, it's necessary to use water to "plug" the open channel that allows the magma to flow into the lowest level. Once the obsidian is mined and recovered, that "plug" is channeled out last, and the magma flows as above. (Make sure the dwarf who channels out that plug has a safe escape route!) See here.
Dangers
Dangers are many, and experience is a hard teacher. Fun is only funny up to a point. Some of the common dangers/warnings include...
- Do not pressurize the lava via pumps. This can cause the whole to overflow.
- Be aware of up-staircases or other floor-perforations below the magma level that may cause leaking/flooding.
- Label your levers! (see below)
- Seal your dwarfs away from the magma until it is all obsidian. Linked doors are the only "positive" locking system. If you think you want to do it manually, keep the number of doors to a minimum.
- Try to balance the water - too little means left-over magma (which cannot be channeled around), and too much can disrupt work and evaporation may take too long and water can build up over repeated cycles.
Tricks & tips
self-measuring reservoirs
To create a reservoir that measures a pre-determined amount of fluid, use a combination of door(s) (or hatches/floodgates) and drawbridge(s) attached to one lever, one at the inflow and one at the outflow. When a lever is thrown one way, doors open and drawbridges "raise" (sealing any path they block); when the lever is thrown the other way, the reverse happens, the doors sealing and the drawbridges opening. Clever use of this fact can allow liquid to fill a "measuring reservoir", which then seals the input while being emptied. Once all the liquid is emptied, the lever is thrown again, the outflow seals, the inflow opens, and it refills to its full capacity, ready to deliver another pre-measured dose of liquid.
double-wide magma channels
To designate a large area for channeling, one row must be designated at a time to prevent idiot miners from trapping themselves on an isolated island of stone. While this may be the best use of space, creating double-wide channels for the magma/obsidian (possibly with double-wide bridges/water reservoirs immediately above them) is far easier to designate when it comes time to harvest the obsidian, and no dwarf will ever channel themselves into a corner.
...................... .cccccccccccccccccccc. .cccccccccccccccccccc. .cc................... Magma .cccccccccccccccccccc. Source -> Gcccccccccccccccccccccc. .cc................... .cccccccccccccccccccc. .cccccccccccccccccccc. ......................
G = Magma-Gate (lowest level) c = channel (lowest level) . = floor (mid-level)
labeling levers
One way or another, whenever handling magma it's a good idea to be sure which lever is which. Using the labeling function is a good idea, especially if you leave your fortress and come back later. But a visual cue is also a good idea, either by making the levers of different color stone, or adding colored flooring or walls around/near them. Perhaps "red" for magma, "blue" for water, and "green" for the lockable doors - whatever works best for you. And/or placing them in order of use, from left to right. Anything and everything that makes it safer and more "fool proof" can only be a good thing.
See also: Obsidian Farming 101, for an excellent forum discussion of this topic.