- v50 information can now be added to pages in the main namespace. v0.47 information can still be found in the DF2014 namespace. See here for more details on the new versioning policy.
- Use this page to report any issues related to the migration.
Difference between revisions of "Swimming pool"
m |
LethosorBot (talk | contribs) (Tagging v50 page (4277/4888)) |
||
(3 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | {{migrated article}} | ||
{{projects}} | {{projects}} | ||
{{av}} | {{av}} | ||
− | A [[swimming pool]] is a chamber filled with less than 7/7 deep water. Its design can be similar to that of a [[drowning chamber]], except you want to use it on your own dwarves - to teach them to swim. | + | A [[swimming pool]] is a chamber filled with less than 7/7 deep water. Its design can be similar to that of a [[drowning chamber]], except you want to use it on your own dwarves - to teach them to [[Swimmer|swim]]. |
A dwarf in the water will gain the ability to swim very fast - sadly, not fast enough to prevent death from drowning. While water with a depth of 7/7 is deadly for non-swimmers, you can use water from 4/7 to 6/7 safely, to teach dwarves how to swim without risk of drowning. The speed of learning is independent of the depth, but water with a depth of less than 4/7 is not deep enough to make a dwarf swim, and therefore learn anything. | A dwarf in the water will gain the ability to swim very fast - sadly, not fast enough to prevent death from drowning. While water with a depth of 7/7 is deadly for non-swimmers, you can use water from 4/7 to 6/7 safely, to teach dwarves how to swim without risk of drowning. The speed of learning is independent of the depth, but water with a depth of less than 4/7 is not deep enough to make a dwarf swim, and therefore learn anything. | ||
Line 26: | Line 27: | ||
===Minecart training=== | ===Minecart training=== | ||
− | With the addition of [[minecart]]s, a safe, automated swimming experience can be almost guaranteed. Originally, the design involved hauling dwarves down into a pond and forcing them to swim back out.[http://www.bay12forums.com/smf/index.php?topic=129889.0] However, it was discovered that dwarves gain swimming skill while simply riding in the minecart. A simple loop track which descends 1 z-level into a pool of water then climbs back out will train your dwarves quickly and conveniently. It is advisable to ensure your pond has a uniform depth--fluid [[flow]] can interfere with the minecart, even knocking it off-track. A depth of 4/7 or 5/7 is ideal. Note that water will slow the minecart considerably; if you use impulse ramps instead of rollers, you'll want one impulse ramp after roughly 10 tiles of 4/7 water. | + | With the addition of [[minecart]]s, a safe, automated swimming experience can be almost guaranteed. Originally, the design involved hauling dwarves down into a pond and forcing them to swim back out.[http://www.bay12forums.com/smf/index.php?topic=129889.0] However, it was discovered that dwarves gain swimming skill while simply riding in the minecart. A simple loop track which descends 1 z-level into a pool of water then climbs back out will train your dwarves quickly and conveniently. It is advisable to ensure your pond has a uniform depth--fluid [[flow]] can interfere with the minecart, even knocking it off-track. A depth of 4/7 or 5/7 is ideal. Note that water will slow the minecart considerably; if you use impulse ramps instead of rollers, you'll want one [[Minecart#Impulse_ramps|impulse ramp]] after roughly 10 tiles of 4/7 water. |
{{diagram|spaces=yes|\ | {{diagram|spaces=yes|\ |
Latest revision as of 00:48, 21 December 2022
This article was migrated from DF2014:Swimming pool and may be inaccurate for the current version of DF (v50.14). See this page for more information. |
Part of a number of articles on |
Projects |
---|
Basic |
Aqueduct • Archery tower • Atom smasher • Danger room • Dam • Garbage dump • Mass pit • Moat • Pit trap • Reservoir• Sally port • Swimming pool • Tower • Tree farm |
Advanced |
Drowning chamber • Magma piston • Obsidian farm • Pump stack • Silk farm • Water reactor |
v50.14 · v0.47.05 This article is about the current version of DF.Note that some content may still need to be updated. |
A swimming pool is a chamber filled with less than 7/7 deep water. Its design can be similar to that of a drowning chamber, except you want to use it on your own dwarves - to teach them to swim.
A dwarf in the water will gain the ability to swim very fast - sadly, not fast enough to prevent death from drowning. While water with a depth of 7/7 is deadly for non-swimmers, you can use water from 4/7 to 6/7 safely, to teach dwarves how to swim without risk of drowning. The speed of learning is independent of the depth, but water with a depth of less than 4/7 is not deep enough to make a dwarf swim, and therefore learn anything.
Training your dwarves just requires a place of constantly or temporarily 4-6/7 water. Military orders or making rooms a meeting hall will not entice dwarves into the water, so you may need to prevent them from leaving an area (locked door, etc.) and then fill the area with the required amount of water, or dump them in from above using a retracting bridge.
Swimming, since it involves no activity, can be potentially useful to train weaker, disabled or injured dwarves, whose conditions might go away or become manageable with an attribute boost to strength, endurance, willpower etc.
A fully automated method to train idlers is to use water flowing over a 1-z drop, with a 1-wide meeting zone at the top of the ledge, and a swimming pool at the bottom. Idlers will go to the meeting zone, be swept over the side into the pool and swim to the ramp, and repeat this for as long as they are idle. The meeting zone must have a low enough rate of flow that it has unsubmerged tiles, so dwarves voluntarily move into it. This can be accomplished with tricks like restricting flow through diagonal passages (see Pressure for details). Be aware that in recent versions, dwarves can now suffer injuries more easily when falling, so this method can cause serious harm when the dwarves are washed over the edge. Constructing the landing zone out of lighter materials will help prevent serious complications.
Diagram of the 'fully automated' configuration described above: .... - (pool continues as desired) ║≈≈≈≈║ - depth 4-6 swimming pool on Z-1 ║+++▲║ - dropoff / entrance ramp from above ║~~~~║ - meeting hall, depth 0-3 ╚╗%╔═╝ ║%║ - screw pump (S->N) ║.║ - limited pump source (e.g. depth ~4-per-tick tile on Z-1) ╚═╝ Not pictured: exit from the swimming pool, preferably close to the entrance ramp to minimize delays in training.
Minecart training[edit]
With the addition of minecarts, a safe, automated swimming experience can be almost guaranteed. Originally, the design involved hauling dwarves down into a pond and forcing them to swim back out.[1] However, it was discovered that dwarves gain swimming skill while simply riding in the minecart. A simple loop track which descends 1 z-level into a pool of water then climbs back out will train your dwarves quickly and conveniently. It is advisable to ensure your pond has a uniform depth--fluid flow can interfere with the minecart, even knocking it off-track. A depth of 4/7 or 5/7 is ideal. Note that water will slow the minecart considerably; if you use impulse ramps instead of rollers, you'll want one impulse ramp after roughly 10 tiles of 4/7 water.
z | z | + | 1 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | |||||
░ | ╔ | ═ | ═ | ▲ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ▲ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ╗ | ░ | ░ | ░ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
░ | ║ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ║ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | |||||||
░ | ╚ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ▲ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ▲ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ▲ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ═ | ▲ | ╝ | ░ | ░ | ▼ | ╗ | + | ╞ | ▼ | ░ | ||||||||||||||||||||||
░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ║ | ^ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | ░ | |||||
░ | + | ░ | ░ | H | + | ░ | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
░ | + | ░ | ░ | ░ | + | ░ |
- Carve the tracks and add impulse ramps (shown) or rollers on level z.
- Optionally, add statues or other buildings along the tracks for your dwarves to admire (make sure to leave the corner walls intact).
- Fill the track section on layer z with 4/7 water.
- Link the pressure plate '^' to the hatch cover 'H' (this is necessary to automatically dispose of worn clothing that dwarves drop at the end of the ride).
- Set stop 1 to ride down the ramp to the east immediately/always.
- Assign a minecart to the route (wooden minecarts are recommended in case of collisions).
- Dwarves with the "Push/Haul Vehicles" labor enabled will now automatically train swimming.