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Difference between revisions of "40d:Stone management"
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=== Not '''Actually''' Necessary === | === Not '''Actually''' Necessary === | ||
− | You actually don't need to remove stones at all, except for the stockpile thing. Clearing out the fortress for stone is more of a personal priority rather than an essential need or requirement. However, people have had a tendency to ask about and discuss this specific subject, so here you are. A guide to stone management. | + | You actually don't need to remove stones at all, except for the stockpile thing. Clearing out the fortress for stone is more of a personal priority rather than an essential need or requirement. Remember that there is no such thing as '''excess''' stone to a dwarf. However, people have had a tendency to ask about and discuss this specific subject, so here you are. A guide to stone management. |
[[Category:Guides]] | [[Category:Guides]] |
Revision as of 19:34, 7 December 2007
Mine for long enough and you'll find yourself surrounded with various stones and ores. How do you get rid of them?
Here follows several stone management techniques.
Techniques
Making use of stone and blocks
Use your masons to the fullest by creating roads, blocks, furniture, floodgates. Blocks can be stored in bins, but bins cannot be made from stone so this diverts wood or metal from other uses.
Craftdwarfs at high levels can produce large quantities of rock crafts very quickly, but this trades the problem of clutter from tons of stone to clutter from tons of crafts. However, crafts can be sold to foreign traders and often merchants have plenty of room for a lot of goods.
You can also use stones (and blocks) to build large structures above ground, and floors over areas such as sand, silt, or loam. The building interface might be slow, but not only do you use up the stone from your excavations, but you also create usable indoor space without having to mine any additional stone.
Catapult
Build a catapult (or three), and assign a dwarf (or five) to keep firing stones into walls, or at camels. This destroys the stone and also trains dwarves in siege operating.
Dump
This is a preferred method due to its ease and usefulness. However, it could easily be considered an exploit, and might not work in later versions.v0.27.169.33a
- Make a zone of 1x1 or 1x2 tiles (preferably near your stone-needy workshops), and mark it as a garbage dump.
- Press k and find a stone. Press d, and the stone will be marked for dumping.
- A dwarf with refuse-hauling will come by, and take the stone to the garbage dump.
- Advantage: No matter how many stones you mark for dumping, they will all be placed on the same tiny garbage tile! So basically, mark all the stones you want dumped and they will be dumped. You are now able to place all the stones and ores in the fortress on 1 tile!
- Disadvantage: Every dumped stone will be marked as "Forbidden", and will not be used in stone-production. Use the designation 'Reclaim Items' to reclaim the entire pile. (If you want to only use specific stones, you must press k, find the pile, and press f on every stone you want on the list, using +/- to navigate through the list. Macros may come in handy when employing this method.)
Rock chute
You can dig a channel, and make a zone over an adjacent tile. Mark it as a garbage dump, and dwarves will dump stones flagged as "forbidden" down the channel. The stones will end up in the bottom tile.
Rock compactor
Similar to the rock chute, but build a drawbridge in the pit and a pressure plate at the entrance to the chute, linked to the bridge. Make sure you set the pressure plate to trigger on citizens. Alternately, just link it to a lever and pull it every once in a while. Mark the channel and empty tile as a dump zone. When a stone is dropped, the drawbridge will crush the stone, permanently destroying it. Note: make sure the bridge is up when stones are dumped down it, or it will fling stone back up the channel. To achieve this, you will need to hook up another lever, and pull it once before any dwarves go on the pressure plate.
Level Z: ===== ==.== == == ==^==
Level Z-1: ===== =BBB= =BBB= ==D==
. - Channel = - Wall ^ - Pressure plate B - Drawbridge - make sure to set to raise while constructing, as opposed to retract. D - Door - keep locked to avoid accidently crushing dwarves
Minimizing clutter
The easiest way to avoid stone clutter is not to produce it in the first place. Use unskilled miners for initial fortress excavation to reduce the amount of useless stone they create, and don't dig out more than necessary. Produce lots of barrels and bins to cut down on your need for stockpile space.
However, unskilled miners also have a low chance of creating valuable stones and gems when they dig out a tile. It may require some micromanagement to prevent unskilled miners from wasting potentially valuable materials.
Stockpile
This is not a recommended method due to space requirements. Build a large stockpile for stone away from your fortress. Dwarves will carry stones out to the stockpile, and they will no longer clutter up your fortress. The stockpile needs to be placed somewhere without stones, because only 1 stone will be placed per tile, and will result in long hauling trips.
Reasons for managing stone
Stockpiles
On some stockpiles, you will be unable to use the tiles that contain a stone. It will therefore be a good thing to clear up room for the things you want to stockpile.
Aesthetics
Many players find the fortress more enjoyable to look at if it looks nice and uniform. Random stones lying about are clutter which block the view of a tile and prevent stockpiles from being filled. Create smooth clear floor for a leaner, fitter, happier fortress.
Not Actually Necessary
You actually don't need to remove stones at all, except for the stockpile thing. Clearing out the fortress for stone is more of a personal priority rather than an essential need or requirement. Remember that there is no such thing as excess stone to a dwarf. However, people have had a tendency to ask about and discuss this specific subject, so here you are. A guide to stone management.