Talk:Total Stress Unit Production: Difference between revisions
BoxWithout (talk | contribs) →Not accurate or relevant: Reply |
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A more relevant discussion (although mostly just for generators that consume a resource, like superheated steam engines) is the comparison between su (energy production rate, FE/t) and su.t (energy amount, FE). For example, to compare the efficiency of various fuels for the furnace engine (back in previous versions), you can use su.t: one dried kelp block produces 16 384 su for 200s, so 65 536 000 su.t in total, and a stick only 1 638 400 su.t. [[User:Pics2299|Pics2299]] ([[User talk:Pics2299|talk]]) 11:14, 21 February 2025 (UTC) | A more relevant discussion (although mostly just for generators that consume a resource, like superheated steam engines) is the comparison between su (energy production rate, FE/t) and su.t (energy amount, FE). For example, to compare the efficiency of various fuels for the furnace engine (back in previous versions), you can use su.t: one dried kelp block produces 16 384 su for 200s, so 65 536 000 su.t in total, and a stick only 1 638 400 su.t. [[User:Pics2299|Pics2299]] ([[User talk:Pics2299|talk]]) 11:14, 21 February 2025 (UTC) | ||
:You are absolutely correct. I am tempted to remove the whole page and create a new page dedicated to what an SU is and how to calculate consumption and production costs. [[Total Stress Unit Production]] doesn't seem like the right title for the topic. | |||
:You found the mistake, what do you think? [[User:BoxWithout|BoxWithout]] ([[User talk:BoxWithout|talk]]) 13:53, 21 February 2025 (UTC) |
Revision as of 13:53, 21 February 2025
Not accurate or relevant
It makes sense to talk about su/rpm for a given machine, but not su.rpm. Even then, the total stress capacity should still be measured in su instead of su/rpm. A large water wheel producing 512 su simply means you can run twice the amount of machines as a small water wheel (at 256 su). Comparing su/rpm values only makes sense for measuring the consumption of a group of machines, to evaluate the rpm at which to run the machines to balance throughput and su consumption. A large water wheels isn't just for the looks, it does produce twice the stress capacity. Also, 512 * 4 ≠ 256.
A more relevant discussion (although mostly just for generators that consume a resource, like superheated steam engines) is the comparison between su (energy production rate, FE/t) and su.t (energy amount, FE). For example, to compare the efficiency of various fuels for the furnace engine (back in previous versions), you can use su.t: one dried kelp block produces 16 384 su for 200s, so 65 536 000 su.t in total, and a stick only 1 638 400 su.t. Pics2299 (talk) 11:14, 21 February 2025 (UTC)
- You are absolutely correct. I am tempted to remove the whole page and create a new page dedicated to what an SU is and how to calculate consumption and production costs. Total Stress Unit Production doesn't seem like the right title for the topic.
- You found the mistake, what do you think? BoxWithout (talk) 13:53, 21 February 2025 (UTC)