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Rgamer

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Posts posted by Rgamer


  1. Its not just fair to think of SMP when there are also SSP players.

    This is the single bone I have to pick with your post. Dunk and Bioxx have stated that they are now developing for SMP, not SSP. Therefore, it is quite fair to only think of SMP. I say this as a guy who almost exclusively plays SSP.

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  2. I know there's a process called seasoning used to build wooden ships, because otherwise they rot too fast... Teak reacts really well to this process, if I recall correctly.

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  3. Well, it's mostly because I'm fairly sure a ceramic pot would absorb a lot of the potassium, at least for the first few batches of potash, and the two types of glaze are ash and tin, the simpler of the two (to make and use) being tin glaze. Feel free to correct me on this, I'm not 100% clear on how ash glaze is made.

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  4. This actually is probably a better place for my potash suggestion than the greenhouses threads, so:

    Potash. For fertilizer. It gets it's name because the ash from the burning logs (Sourced from hardwoods) is thrown into a pot of water in order to leach out the potassium, and the the water is poured into a iron drying pan/pot and allowed to dry, leaving a whitish crust of "pot ash", which can then be used as fertilizer. I'm fairly certain that glazed ceramics could also be used as a drying pot, but I get the feeling that this is a good enough fertilizer that we don't want it available until the player leaves the stone age.

    I think an iron pot would have to be cast, not forged, in order to be usable for this process, so we need some sort of casting method- probably sandcasting with ceramic molds.

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  5. A short bow should be added to replace the vanilla bow instead of the Composite/Recurve Bow as its a more accessible/usable weapon than the composite for the fact that Composite bows wouldn't work in humidity/water. Especially since rain variable Is implemented into the calendar now...

    Recurve bows have the advantage of giving you more power for the same bow size. On the other hand, they break faster, because they put more strain on the materials required to make the bow.

    For metal-limbed crossbows with extremely high draw weights, there would be a small crank to pull the string back, called a windlass.

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  6. First, let me note that I think this belongs in the suggestion session.

    That said, in an article about survival traps, the article noted that it is possible to set up an "engine" (a sapling or flexible piece of wood), rigged to yank a fishing line straight up into the air when the hook is disturbed. It's a great "Set and forget" method of gathering food, it's fairly inexpensive, and you can easily set up a bunch of these things. Granted, this assumes you have a decent knife to carve the trigger, but you can make one from a pair of "Y"-shaped sticks in a pinch.

    Source article. The bit relevant to fishing is a fair bit down the article, but the whole thign is a worthwhile read.

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  7. Old-fashioned fertilizers were usually a combination of bones/bonemeal and ash, usually potash (Hence it's usage in DF as fertilizer. Not saying we should necessarily use DF as a model for crops, but it's a fairly (I know this is a taboo word, but....) realistic fertilizer.

    Potash is created by leaching various plant ashes in a pot full of water. Seriously. This concentrates the potassium to useful levels.

    EDIT: A major source of potash was hardwoods. The techniques consisting of burning excess hardwood not needed for fuel/construction down into ash, which is used to make lye, which is boiled down into potash. A multi-stage, lengthy process which yielded enough to be useful, but only after significant investment of time into it's manufacture.

    Also, since lye would necessarily be needed for this....

    lye + tallow = soap

    Or, if you prefer,

    lye + oil = soap

    If we ever have a use for soap.

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  8. I went on a trip to the NASA biotech labs down here in Florida, and the coolest part was the plant labs. They were testing red LEDs vs. white LEDs for growing plants in space. Turns out, many plants grow better with red light as opposed to white light (equal intensity), because they absorb a higher percentage of the light, and thus have more energy to grow.... and do. Also, the giant isolation chambers where they were running the controls for experiments currently running on the Space Station.

    I know this post is sorta redundant, but it's just too cool not to share.

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  9. thanks for all the DF spoilers guys, you're awesome.

    *achartran directs intense feelings of scorn at people in this topic.

    It's good having reached the HFS, candy, and clowns for the first time :)

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  10. I'd like to be able to set charcoal piles ablaze, in order to perhaps heat up those spike traps?

    In order for this to be practical, we'd need to be able to make charcoal piles, like log piles, and perhaps bring back a flint & steel as a reliable igniter.

    Related to hunting, I'd like a spit, to mass-cook meat. It's possible in a forge, but I don't like using my precious charcoal to cook food. I'd rather just use hickory.

    (Because getting impaled isn't bad enough, you're impaled, and the wounds are burning you up from the inside out.)

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  11. I think that gengeneering is ok, as long as plants stay purely plant. I don't want a grape that tastes like bacon or has pork in it.

    Personally, I like the addition of antifreeze proteins from trout to oranges. It means when there's a cold snap, orange farmers don't demand I pay for their losses via bailouts, subsidies, etc. Proteins from plants and proteins from animals work the same, are the same. If I gave you a slab of ATP synthase, you couldn't tell me if it was from a fish, a donkey, a redwood, a seaweed, a plum tree, or a rat.

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  12. I'd definitely hope there's no need to say something that definitely, if we had a system like from the ships mod on the front page I could make myself a nice raft and hopefully save some time travelling across the ocean and you could make whatever you felt like.

    (Brief shipbuilding history)

    There are two hull forms for ships, Atlantic, and Mediterranean. The Mediterranean is a very calm body of water, so the vessels developed for Mediterranean conditions reflect that. They are shallow-draft vessels, usually relying on oars for their primary source of power, with one giant square sail on a single mast. Examples: Galleys and galleases. They tend to look like a bowl floating on the water, since they tend to be very beamy (wide) for their length.

    The Atlantic is a much rougher body of water, and sailing on it in a Mediterranean-style vessel is tantamount to suicide. The Atlantic style of ships is what most people think of when they think of sail-driven ships: A long, narrow hull with fairly deep draft (Lots of hull underwater), driven by sails on between three and five masts. It's a much more powerful sail arrangement, which means you don't need oars. This clears the sides of the ships for massive banks of cannon, leading to the age of the ships of the line. Lots of cannon, lots of sailors, lots of boarding actions, and lots of dead. Also the end of the land battle at sea as naval combat.

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  13. And that would be all my sternum is bent literally three inches farther in then it should be, I was born with a deflated lung (although this was fixed) and a have a terrible allergy to amoxicilan that may not sound bad to you but I also have terrible ears and therefore suffered from severe ear infections do you know what is used to cure that, amoxicilan so I had to suffer through it so bad that my ear collapsed and burst so I terribly that they had to cut my head open twice to attempt to fix it. I'm currently active on my football, baseball and skiing teams. Varsity letters for the first two and competitive racing for the other.

    Whining only holds you back and leads to depression and other undesirable conditions far worse than what you started with. Be thankful you are alive. And certainly don't complain on a public forum where quite honestly none of us really care.

    On-topic wouldn't brick cook faster too?

    Hey, he asked, I answered. I don't bring up my physical condition unless someone asks, and I (thought I) was. I'm quite grateful I don't have allergies to fish, flour, and several other things, I'm eternally grateful my asthma is controllable, and I'm quite glad my sternum doesn't require surgery to fix. However, these problems genetics has inflicted on me leave me with zero desire to inflict additional damage with drugs, tobacco, or alcohol. That was the point I had, and as this topic had somehow turned into a discussion of drugs, I made the point that even though I think people should be free to damage their bodies for pleasure as much as they like, I don't want to damage mine for pleasure. That's it.

    On topic, I think that bricks would be prone to allow oxygen into charcoal pit, unless fitted extremely precisely or mortared.

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  14. libertarian is a political party. Basically the platform is to get government out of telling ppl what to do if activity doesnt infringe on other person's rights.

    so: legalizing drugs etc, but not murder or slavery.

    And the legalizing drugs bit is why people assume all of us are either addicts, or alcoholics. Hence the annoyance.

    @redundantusage: Welcome to the TFCraft forums: where there is more off-topic stuff in the average topic than on-topic stuff, even in the off-topic forums.

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  15. Oy >:/

    What? My sternum is between two and three times as thick as it should be, I have atshma that would have probably hospitalized me several times by now if not for my controller, and I have lethal allergies to nuts (Which are in far more things than most people realize).

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  16. Well, Celsius to Fahrenheit is "(Degrees in Celsius x 1.8) + 32"

    Conversely, Fahrenheit to Celsius should obviously be "(Degrees in Fahrenheit - 32) / 1,8"

    So those would be roughly: 15.6, 21.1, 26.7, 32.2 (so 15,20,25,30 is indeed close enough, as mentioned above. xD)

    I've yet to understand how it is considered logical to base a temperature scale on freezing point for brine at 0F, freezing point of water at 32F and the rough temperature of a human body at 96F(on the first scale, then changed to 90, and now approximately 98). I get that the relation was originally 0:1:3, but I still don't see why. =P

    Again, logic would dictate that the Celsius scale is more consistent(and once learned, easier to use. Though this could be because I'm used to it. =P). Though I guess that is why Kelvin is used for scientific purposes most of the time.

    Actually, it's based on the temperature of the human body at 100F, but when Farenheit measured his wife's temperature, she had a fever.

    you do know that the rest of "the real world" uses the metric system right?

    I think they assume most of us aren't going to leave the US or interact with the rest of the world. Besides, whether they succeed in educating us for the real world or not, they still get their paychecks, their munificent benefits, and when they retire, their pensions and the same benefits they enjoyed while working.

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