liquid cyanite and water cooling still over 4000 degeres C?
andrewmonson opened this issue · 7 comments
Please provide screenshots and a detailed description of the issue, along with reproduction steps.
liquid cyanite in the middle of four yellorite fuel tanks, other four corners filled with water, water pumping in, steam pumping out, all should be fine, but the core gets over 4000 degrees C and the reactor stopped producing rf at about 630000 rf. Im new to big reactors and I would appreciate the help, thanks.
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From: Mr. E. Beef
Sent: Sunday, August 17, 2014 4:43 PM
To: erogenousbeef/BigReactors
Cc: KapXRecon
Please provide screenshots and a detailed description of the issue, along with reproduction steps.
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Liquid cyanite does nothing at the moment, it's a placeholder for future content. It'll be treated like air right now, which is generally pretty bad for your reactor.
If you have an actively-cooled reactor (water in/steam out via coolant ports), then the reactor itself won't produce RF. If the steam tank fills up, the reactor can no longer cool itself by evaporating water and heat will rapidly start to build up.
If you're new, you probably want to stick with a passively-cooled reactor for now - just remove the coolant ports. The reactor will directly generate RF from heat.
If your steam tank isn't full, and heat is still rising, then you're generating more heat than the reactor can handle with the amount of water you're feeding it. Either increase the amount of water going into the reactor (tesseracts help a lot here), or throttle the reactor by inserting the control rods (climb on top of the reactor and rightclick on a control rod to get a GUI to change the control rod insertion).
Ok thanks. I think I can fix it. I can easily increase the amount of water pumping in and Ill change out the cyanite. But before I get all the stuff I need for organization purposes, Ill make it passivley-cooled. Thanks again!
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On Aug 17, 2014, at 8:47 PM, "Mr. E. Beef" [email protected] wrote:
Liquid cyanite does nothing at the moment, it's a placeholder for future content. It'll be treated like air right now, which is generally pretty bad for your reactor.
If you have an actively-cooled reactor (water in/steam out via coolant ports), then the reactor itself won't produce RF. If the steam tank fills up, the reactor can no longer cool itself by evaporating water and heat will rapidly start to build up.
If you're new, you probably want to stick with a passively-cooled reactor for now - just remove the coolant ports. The reactor will directly generate RF from heat.
—
Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub.