I did not expect the room to cope with that so easily. Keeping the temperature high enough might be the bottleneck instead of overpressure when all the rockets are going. But it's all only temporary 😀 Also is that the first graph this playthrough??
badass! certainly faster than trying to use sorters and all to sort the ice while it’s still solid. can’t wait to see how well it does with all six rockets!
i’m somewhat unfamiliar with the liquids in this game, but eventually if you melt enough water ice in that room would it ever “fill up” with water? i think that’s how it worked years ago when you could still actually see water on the ground but they’ve made a lot of changes since then. i wonder does the water content of an atmosphere contribute to overall pressure in a room, or is there like a separate “liquids atmosphere” that has its own temperature and pressure?
Champion
👋
Mathematics. Describes the past, gives insight into the presence, and predicts the future. Isn't that enough?
I did not expect the room to cope with that so easily.
Keeping the temperature high enough might be the bottleneck instead of overpressure when all the rockets are going.
But it's all only temporary 😀
Also is that the first graph this playthrough??
Rob Peter to pay Paul.
This series is great. I hope you take some time to enjoy KSP2 coming out soon too.
Can u upload this save 🙃
Amazing. Love it. Can't wait for another one.
Awesome episode! I wanna see all 6 rockets emptying into that room. Or should I say, I wanna see what it does to your framerate 🙂
Putting 4 vents per cell is probably overkill, you likely could get away with 1-2 per cell
badass! certainly faster than trying to use sorters and all to sort the ice while it’s still solid. can’t wait to see how well it does with all six rockets!
i’m somewhat unfamiliar with the liquids in this game, but eventually if you melt enough water ice in that room would it ever “fill up” with water? i think that’s how it worked years ago when you could still actually see water on the ground but they’ve made a lot of changes since then. i wonder does the water content of an atmosphere contribute to overall pressure in a room, or is there like a separate “liquids atmosphere” that has its own temperature and pressure?