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Difference between revisions of "40d Talk:Water"

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"If a site contains saltwater (there will be a warning before embarkation), then all the naturally occurring water in that site will be salt water; including ponds, rivers and aquifers."
 
"If a site contains saltwater (there will be a warning before embarkation), then all the naturally occurring water in that site will be salt water; including ponds, rivers and aquifers."
  
However, I have made wells from aquifers before on a map that was 1/4 tropical ocean and my dwarves drank from it.  I think this information might be wrong.  (Edit: I did not use a pump at all.  I just channeled out above an aquifer and let the area below fill up, and then created wells over top of it).
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However, I have made wells from aquifers before on a map that was 1/4 tropical ocean and my dwarves drank from it.  I think this information might be wrong.  (Edit: I did not use a pump at all.  I just channeled out above an aquifer and let the area below fill up, and then created wells over top of it). {{unsigned|frewfrux}}
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:According to a [[Talk:Well#Salt_Water|comment]] on the [[well]] [[Talk:Well|talk page]], it may in fact be the well that somehow manages to desalinate the water! Check to see if a zone drawn over the aquifier can be marked as a water source. If not, then this is most certainly a feature of wells which should be noted! --[[User:Raumkraut|Raumkraut]] 16:28, 20 October 2008 (EDT)

Revision as of 20:28, 20 October 2008

I dug into a Murky pool, all 7's, drained out 8 squares of 7's into my reservoir to irrigate my farm, then closed the floodgate up. The murky pool was mixed 6's and 7's. After winter, it froze over, and in Spring melted back into all 7's again. Apparently they can refill themselves. It did snow on top of the pool. Perhaps the snow melted and got it wet? --Tracker 20:36, 30 October 2007 (EDT)

As far as I know, if there's any water in the pool then they will freeze into ice walls. When the ice wall melts, it will always melt to depth 7, irrespective of how much water the ice was originally formed from. It is unaffected by snowfall, so if your murky pool ever completely dries out, it will never refill, even if you get lots of rain or snow. --Morlark

Do fish really flop around after you drain a pool? This didn't happen for me. --Turgid Bolk 17:08, 3 November 2007 (EDT)

Does anyone know what the water output of a brook is? As in, does it fill a 1-width channel any faster or slower than a river?--Xazak 18:29, 3 November 2007 (EDT)

Has anyone else seen stagnant water spontaneously appear beside a still? I had it happen twice, I swear that the still is leaking. --Krenn 02:58, 14 November 2007 (EST)

Likely, a dwarf for some reason dumped out a bucket or waterskin nearby. It tends to happen when you get job cancellations while filling a well or taking water to a prisoner or injured dwarf.--Knivesu 06:58, 3 December 2007 (EST)

Evaporation

I notice that evaporation isn't covered here or in Magma, and I think it might be a useful topic. My observation is that depth 1 fluids can evaporate if left alone. This means that you can get rid of arbitrary amounts of fluid simply by spreading it out enough, or by using a multiple-floodgate lock system to meter measured quantities of fluid out over a chamber floor. In my experience, evaporated water leaves behind mud, whereas evaporated magma leaves behind nothing. --Doctorlucky 16:45, 19 March 2008 (EDT)

Magma... evaporates? Could be true – this is DF, after all. --Savok 14:38, 21 March 2008 (EDT)

Bend bugs

Should we add a section about the u-bend bug?

I've just managed to make a V-bend that can absorb infinite water as well as the U-bend that creates it. Basically I used ramps to create a dip in a pipe trying to make a u-bend, and when I poured a full murky pool into it I ended up with only the bottom three squares full of water. I then got a real u-bend going from another pond and as much as it poured into a pool the v-bend absorbed it all.

Can anyone reproduce? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ikkonoishi (talkcontribs)

The u-bend is notorious, but never heard or ran into a "v-bend" before. A (side) diagram of your v-bend would be helpful in reproducing. As for pages, I'd say no, since they shouldn't end up being around a long time, but who knows. --Edward 18:13, 1 February 2008 (EST)

I was going to do one but couldn't figure out how to make the ramps. I'll just use \.
 Water went in. -->  ~.~########
                     ~.~.~###       <--- No water out
                     ####\~# /##
                     #####\~/###
                     ###########

Even when I brought infinite water from a normal u-bend two levels above it it would not flow through to fill the pond again until I capped the holes. Using periods to break up the ~ so I don't have to use nowiki tags. --Ikkonoishi 18:58, 1 February 2008 (EST)

The map http://mkv25.net/dfma/poi-3138-emptypool --Ikkonoishi 19:02, 1 February 2008 (EST)


Stagnant Water

What marks water as stagnant? I know bucket water dumped on the ground is sometimes stagnant, but it's not defined here and I'm not sure what does it.--Dadamh 13:30, 29 May 2008 (EDT)

Ice that melts becomes stagnant water. So if you mine out ice in an underground area, it will immediately melt into stagnant water. Tachyon 13:56, 30 July 2008 (EDT)
But I've had water in a bucket turn Stagnant. What is your responce Poindexter?! Hoborobo 16:32, 30 July 2008 (EDT)

Map limits

Does water fall off the edge of the map ? Is it possible to actually make it flow out the map like rivers do ? Is it possible underground, several z-levels below he surface ? --Cptnemo01 03:51, 6 July 2008 (EDT)

I would think so, but bear in mind that you can not construct or dig near the edge of the map, making it impossible to channel out water (however, you could make a big surface delta). --Aykavil 08:07, 17 July 2008 (EDT)

underground water manipulation

I am utterly lost when it comes to making underground channels/resovuoirs/wells or any other aquatic contraption beneath the earth. I've looked through both the wiki and the bay12 forums and all I've found are specialized articles for people who already know the basics. so can someone point me in the right direction? or even make a faq, if you're bored? I'd appreciate it. --Splendiferous 04:54, 9 August 2008 (EDT)

Perhaps you have something a little more specific? Asking for all three is rather big and vague. --borninshadow 22:32, 19 August 2008 (GMT -8)

Finding Water

If there is no water visible on the map, how can I track it down? There's a small glacier away from my mountain, but I don't see an easy way to melt it. Other than that, nothing shows up on the map underground. -- Aegeus (21:09, 20 September 2008)

I'll take a guess and say exploratory mining is the only way to go. Only one that I know of at least. --MagicGuigz 23:19, 4 October 2008 (EDT)

Wrong Information on Page?

The salt water section states:

"If a site contains saltwater (there will be a warning before embarkation), then all the naturally occurring water in that site will be salt water; including ponds, rivers and aquifers."

However, I have made wells from aquifers before on a map that was 1/4 tropical ocean and my dwarves drank from it. I think this information might be wrong. (Edit: I did not use a pump at all. I just channeled out above an aquifer and let the area below fill up, and then created wells over top of it). unsigned comment by frewfrux

According to a comment on the well talk page, it may in fact be the well that somehow manages to desalinate the water! Check to see if a zone drawn over the aquifier can be marked as a water source. If not, then this is most certainly a feature of wells which should be noted! --Raumkraut 16:28, 20 October 2008 (EDT)