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Difference between revisions of "v0.34:Steel"

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The overall reaction consumes 2 bars of iron, 2 units of flux, and 2 units of fuel as ingredients (plus an extra 2 fuel at a conventional smelter for power). This produces 2 bars of steel.
 
The overall reaction consumes 2 bars of iron, 2 units of flux, and 2 units of fuel as ingredients (plus an extra 2 fuel at a conventional smelter for power). This produces 2 bars of steel.
  
Remember that smelting [[iron]] [[ore]] also requires 1 unit of fuel at a conventional smelter, producing 4 bars of [[iron]], which translates to half a unit of additional fuel used in the recipe above (altho you will need a full unit up front).
+
Remember that smelting [[iron]] [[ore]] also requires 1 unit of fuel at a conventional smelter, producing 4 bars of [[iron]], which translates to half a unit of additional fuel used in the recipe above (although you will need a full unit up front.)
  
 
<gallery>
 
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Revision as of 22:35, 9 October 2012

Steel
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Uses
Graphic

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Recipe
Properties

Wikipedia article

This article is about an older version of DF.

Steel is the best common metal for smithing weapons and armor. Products made with steel have a very high value, equal to that of gold.

Steel can be smelted at a smelter by a dwarf with the furnace operator labor activated.

Sedimentary Layers

To smelt steel, you will need iron ore, flux stone, and fuel. Flux is used to remove carbon during the smelting process, while fuel (coke or charcoal) puts it back in. The end result is steel: iron with just the right amount of carbon in it. The three ores of iron (hematite, magnetite, and limonite) can only be found in sedimentary layers, with the exception of hematite, which can occasionally be found in igneous extrusive layers. Furthermore, four of the five flux stones (calcite, chalk, dolomite, and limestone) are found only in sedimentary layers, as well as both coal ores (bituminous coal and lignite) for making coke fuel.

If you have no sedimentary layers at your fortress site, your only hope to make steel is with:

(Even if you find and use magma for your furnaces, you'll still need the fuel in the smelting process, so you'll be cutting down a tree and burning it to make charcoal for every unit of hematite you manage to scrounge up.)

Recipe

Steel production is fairly complex compared to the creation of other alloys. Important note: in steelmaking, coke or charcoal is used as an ingredient, apart from powering the furnace with fuel. A conventional (non-magma) smelter will require additionally 1 unit of fuel to power itself in each reaction.

SteelChart.png

The first step is to create pig iron:

  • 1 bar of iron
  • 1 flux stone
  • 1 unit of fuel
  • A power source (1 unit of fuel, or magma)
Produces:
  • 1 bar of pig iron

The second step combines the pig iron with plain iron to produce steel:

  • 1 bar of iron
  • 1 bar of pig iron
  • 1 flux stone
  • 1 unit of fuel
  • A power source (1 unit of fuel, or magma)
Produces:
  • 2 bars of steel

The overall reaction consumes 2 bars of iron, 2 units of flux, and 2 units of fuel as ingredients (plus an extra 2 fuel at a conventional smelter for power). This produces 2 bars of steel.

Remember that smelting iron ore also requires 1 unit of fuel at a conventional smelter, producing 4 bars of iron, which translates to half a unit of additional fuel used in the recipe above (although you will need a full unit up front.)

Base
AluminumBismuthCopperGoldIronLeadNickelPlatinumSilverTinZinc
Alloys
Special