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Large pot
This article was migrated from DF2014:Large pot and may be inaccurate for the current version of DF (v50.11). See this page for more information. |
v50.11 · v0.47.05 This article is about the current version of DF.Note that some content may still need to be updated. |
This feature has one or more outstanding bugs. Please view the Bugs section for details. |
Material selection[edit]
As with other containers, several factors are relevant in choosing the proper material for making large pots. Namely, availability, value, fire/magma safety, vermin resistance, hippie elf kosherness, and most importantly weight.
Pots made from stone of typical* density will be 33% heavier than typical* wooden barrels. Fire clay "stoneware" pots weigh the same as a wooden barrel, while earthenware pots are lighter but must be glazed. This makes large stone pots superior for any stockpile that does not require the containers to be moved, such as prepared meals. Ceramic pots are superior to typical wood in all cases.
- (*There are exceptionally light or heavy examples of both stone and wood, but the majority of types of each fall into a "typical" weight category.)
Pots are only 1/4 as heavy[1] as barrels made from the same material (e.g. metal, glass). This means metal pots are generally a better storage option than metal barrels, saving the industry precious dwarf-hours by hauling faster due to lighter containers. Additionally, a metal barrel costs 3 bars, but a metal pot only 1, making metal barrels a vastly less attractive option.
But in the case of large pots, stone is typically used chiefly due to its abundance, especially for young outposts. Doing so will conserve wood (likely the only other economic choice) for tasks for which stone cannot be used (and metal is not always practical), such as making beds, bins, buckets, cages, charcoal, crutches and splints, pipe sections, stepladders, training weapons, wheelbarrows, and many other items* of various usefulness and importance.
- (*Crossbows and bolts could fall here, too, but those often deserve to be made of a weapons-grade metal.)
Large pots take up 500 units of volume.
Unless, of course, the embark location has trees aplenty, making it viable to use wood for most everything, including pots, though this obviously requires a sufficient amount of woodcutters, wood crafters, axes, and contempt towards the tree-huggers elves.
Forging and melting[edit]
- Metal pots cost one metal bar to forge, or one adamantine wafer.
- When a pot is melted down, it will return 0.3 metal bars/adamantine wafers for an efficiency of 30%.
Bugs[edit]
- Pots will not be used for processing sweet pods into dwarven syrup. Bug:4356
- Dwarves will sometimes leave pots in furniture stockpile even when using them to store food. Bug:1833
See also[edit]
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"Large pot" in other Languages ![]()
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Raws |
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[ITEM_TOOL:ITEM_TOOL_LARGE_POT]
[NAME:pot:pots]
[ADJECTIVE:large]
[VALUE:10]
[HARD_MAT]
[TOOL_USE:FOOD_STORAGE]
[TILE:232]
[SIZE:5000]
[MATERIAL_SIZE:1]
[CONTAINER_CAPACITY:60000] |