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Difference between revisions of "v0.31:Bismuth bronze"

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m (Undo revision 101191 by VengefulDonut (Talk))
m (Making bismuth bronze takes a good deal more labor than regular bronze)
 
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{{av}}
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{{Alloy3|name=Bismuth bronze|color=6:6:1|color1=7:3:0|color2=6:4:0|color3=5:5:1
{{elven}}
 
{{Alloy3|name=Bismuth bronze|color=#FF0|bgcolor=#880|color1=#880|color2=#CCC|color3=#F0F
 
 
|recipe=
 
|recipe=
* 2 {{L|Copper}}
+
* 1 [[Tin]]
* 1 {{L|Tin}}
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* 2 [[Copper]]
* 1 {{L|Bismuth}}
+
* 1 [[Bismuth]]
 
|uses=
 
|uses=
* {{L|weapon|Melee Weapons}}
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* [[weapon|Melee Weapons]]
* {{L|Crossbow}}s
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* [[Crossbow]]s
* {{L|Bolt}}s
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* [[Bolt]]s
* {{L|Pick}}s
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* [[Pick]]s
* {{L|Armor}}
+
* [[Armor]]
* {{L|Metalsmith's forge|Metal crafting}}
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* [[Metalsmith's forge|Metal crafting]]
 
|properties=
 
|properties=
* {{L|Material value}} 6}}
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* [[Material value]] 6
 +
}}{{av}}{{Quality|Exceptional|05:42, 24 May 2010 (UTC)}}
  
'''Bismuth bronze''' has the exact same weapon and armor properties as regular {{L|bronze}}.  It can be used to make all {{L|furniture}} and other objects.  Bismuth bronze is 20% more {{L|value|valuable}} than {{L|bronze}} - 3 times more {{L|value|valuable}} (6) than its component parts - and is colored differently.
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'''Bismuth bronze''' has the exact same weapon and armor properties as regular [[bronze]].  It can be used to make all [[furniture]] and other objects.  Bismuth bronze is 20% more [[value|valuable]] than [[bronze]],  three times more [[value|valuable]] than its component parts, and has a unique color.
  
 
Bismuth bronze is made with the following recipe:
 
Bismuth bronze is made with the following recipe:
  
* 1 {{L|bismuth}} {{L|bar}} + 1 {{L|tin}} bar + 2 {{L|copper}} bars (not {{L|ore}}s)
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* 1 [[tin]] [[bar]] + 2 [[copper]] bars + 1 [[bismuth]] bar (not [[ore]]s)
  
Because of these proportions, bismuth bronze is produced in lots of 4 bars at a time.  While the ores must be smelted normally, only 1 additional fuel is needed to produce those 4 bars of bismuth bronze from the 4 bars noted above. (Or in a magma smelter, none at all.)
+
Because of these proportions, bismuth bronze is produced in lots of four bars at a time.  While the ores must be smelted normally, only one additional [[fuel]] is needed to produce those four bars of bismuth bronze from the four bars noted above at a regular [[smelter]]. At a [[magma smelter]], fuel isn't an issue, although the additional time and labor of smelting each ore into bars should still be considered.
  
{{Game_Data}}
+
Bismuth bronze also provides more weapons-grade metal per tin bar than regular bronze, which may be a consideration if [[cassiterite]] is rare on your map.
  
{{Category|Metals}}
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It is also the best material for making crossbows. While crossbow firing damage does not depend on the material (only on quality), they are used as hammers in close combat and bismuth bronze is the densest of the materials you can make crossbows of.
 +
 
 +
{{gamedata}}
 +
{{metals}}

Latest revision as of 19:28, 13 December 2011

Bismuth bronze
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Uses
Recipe
Properties

Wikipedia article

This article is about an older version of DF.

Bismuth bronze has the exact same weapon and armor properties as regular bronze. It can be used to make all furniture and other objects. Bismuth bronze is 20% more valuable than bronze, three times more valuable than its component parts, and has a unique color.

Bismuth bronze is made with the following recipe:

Because of these proportions, bismuth bronze is produced in lots of four bars at a time. While the ores must be smelted normally, only one additional fuel is needed to produce those four bars of bismuth bronze from the four bars noted above at a regular smelter. At a magma smelter, fuel isn't an issue, although the additional time and labor of smelting each ore into bars should still be considered.

Bismuth bronze also provides more weapons-grade metal per tin bar than regular bronze, which may be a consideration if cassiterite is rare on your map.

It is also the best material for making crossbows. While crossbow firing damage does not depend on the material (only on quality), they are used as hammers in close combat and bismuth bronze is the densest of the materials you can make crossbows of.

Base
AluminumBismuthCopperGoldIronLeadNickelPlatinumSilverTinZinc
Alloys
Special