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'''Wells''' are structures that serve as water source for your dwarves. A well can be an important feature of a fortress, providing a clean and usually safe water supply compared to rivers, pools and cavern lakes. | '''Wells''' are structures that serve as water source for your dwarves. A well can be an important feature of a fortress, providing a clean and usually safe water supply compared to rivers, pools and cavern lakes. |
Revision as of 15:07, 13 April 2010
This article is about an older version of DF. |
Wells are structures that serve as water source for your dwarves. A well can be an important feature of a fortress, providing a clean and usually safe water supply compared to rivers, pools and cavern lakes.
Wells provide an emergency drinking source in case the alcohol runs out (don't let that happen!). A well is a water source that (if constructed correctly) will not freeze in the coldest weather, and should last in hot. Because the water from a well is never seen as stagnant, the dwarfs won't wait until they're thirsty and miserable to drink from a well should they need to.
Using a well provides that dwarf with a happy thought, especially if you make the well with high-quality chains and buckets, or the building designer produces a high quality result.[Verify] The unhappy thought that a dwarf gets from murky or contaminated water will not occur if the dwarf drinks that very same water by way of a well. A well even allows dwarves to drink from salt water (though this may be a bug).[Verify]
Badly wounded dwarves will drink only water while recuperating, never booze[Verify], so you better have a well or water zone ready for when anyone gets injured, and certainly before the first goblins show up.
Using the well (10 times) will take a small amount of water from the water tile below (1/7 from that one tile), so it will eventually dry up if not replenished.
Also, dwarfs can (and will) fish from a well if that labor is designated.[Verify] This does not harm the well.
A well can be defined as a meeting area with the q key. Un-defining the meeting area will break up any party that is currently formed around a well, and it can immediately be re-defined if you wish.
Dwarves will use the well to wash themselves.
Building a well
When constructing a well, it is important to consider placement, safety, the source of the water, and any Template:L to avoid flooding your fortress by accident. For a wider discussion of adding a well to your fortress, see the (recommended) Template:L.
Wells must have a clear vertical pathway straight down to their water source. That source can be an artificial channel, an aquifer, a river, a brook, a lake, or an artificial reservoir, so long as it has water in it that's at least 3/7 deep. The water can be any distance directly below the well. If there is 7/7 deep water somewhere directly below the well, then the depth of the top tile of this water does not matter.
It is less work to create a well that draws water from sources lower than an existing ground level, but above-ground sources can also be used so long as you construct the well (and first any floor needed to support it) on a z-level above the water's level.
To build a well you will need the following components:
- a Template:L
- a Template:L
- a Template:L
- a Template:L
- an 'open space' tile to place the well on
To place a well, press the b, l keys. That will take you through the various components, and you can choose specifically from among the parts you have available in each category. A well needs to be placed over an open space with adjacent floor tiles, there does not need to be water underneath a well for it to be built, only for it to be active.
It requires a dwarf with the Template:L Template:L designated to design, and then a Template:L/Template:L/Template:L to finish the construction. Because it's designed, high-value materials can be multiplied by a high-quality effort on the part of either or both the steps involved, and can result in an extremely valuable piece of architecture for your fortress.
If a well is working properly, meaning it has direct access to water, it will display "active" when examined with q. If there is something obstructing the well, or there is not enough water, it will display "dry". If the well is flooding, it will display "bucket is full of water".
While in use by a dwarf, you can see the actual rope and bucket travel through the z-levels. Nifty!
It is possible to build wells directly above one another, and they will still function if there is water below, they will not obstruct one another, as they are not impassible structures, as evidenced by dwarves falling in. Hatches, floor bars and floor grates will block well functionality, if they are between it and the water, but grates and bars will not stop water from flooding out. Grates, bars and hatches will allow functionality again if opened with a lever. It is perfectly reasonable to have multiple well openings drawing from a single water source, as a well only cares about the tile in a straight line below it. Wells cannot function through a stairwell or a ramp. It is possible to have obstacles beneath a well, with the well continuing to function, if the surface of the water is above the obstacles.
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Barracks • Bedroom • Dining room • Dormitory • Jail • Meeting hall • Hospital • Office • Sculpture garden • Tomb • Zoo |
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Animal trap • Anvil • Armor stand • Bed • Bin • Box • Bucket • Cabinet • Cage • Coffin • Restraint • Seat • Statue • Table • Weapon rack |
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Axle • Gear assembly • Millstone • Screw pump • Water wheel • Windmill • Lever • Pressure plate • Trap • Support |
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