I miss using insertion pipes, advanced extraction, and similar. Could this mod be add to your various ftb mod packs?
Is it updated yet? I plan to add it myself regardless unless the mindcrackers add it to their pack. it simplifies life quite a bit. especially the valve pipe is really useful.I miss using insertion pipes, advanced extraction, and similar. Could this mod be add to your various ftb mod packs?
Valve and Industrial Liquid Pipe aren't as important anymore, not with Liquiduct Pipes around. They really take a lot of the sting out of steam transportation. They can even be configured to run parallel without connecting.
I am missing the Insertion Pipe, though.
Having the functionality is nice and all, but I don't like the way these features are implemented with the liquiduct. The thing about the valve pipe, was that is acted like it's namesake, namely as a valve, allowing a signal to turn on or off the flow from whatever item it was attached to. It also had a unique texture, that allowed you to see at a glance that it was a valve pipe fitted, and not some other pipe.
Actually, if you check the last posts on the Minecraft forums there is a third party update to Additional Buildcraft Objects which brings it up to date to 1.4.6. (this post: http://www.minecraftforum.net/topic...uildcraft-objects/page__st__680#entry19912293)
I looked through the changes he made in the code on GitHub and they're really minor. He basically moved a few lines (loading stuff in a slightly different order) and adjusted something the apparently got renamed in Forge. So unless the original author plans to add anything else I doubt he'll do much different than the third party did.
The only issue I see is that there is the issue of copyright, but I doubt that'll give any serious trouble (on GitHub I saw that specific third party apparently also did some modifications in the past, which I assume the author was fine with).
Edit:
Have you even tried Liquiducts yet? Because they have valve functionality which can be controlled with redstone... Also every connection a Liquiduct makes with a machine is automatically turned into a valve, so you never have to look, you know it's there. Unless I'm missing something, Liquiducts are better than Valves + industrial pipes because they pretty much are those 2 in 1.
Having more than one function in the same item is not always better. It's a preference thing. I strongly prefer to have full control over what type of functionality goes where. also it's about looks/feel. a valve is something you place as part of a plan. not something a pipe just does on it's own automatically. I wasn't complaining about the functionality. i was disliking how it was implemented. (I don't like items that does everything for me without me having to think about it)
Valve and Industrial Liquid Pipe aren't as important anymore, not with Liquiduct Pipes around. They really take a lot of the sting out of steam transportation. They can even be configured to run parallel without connecting.
I am missing the Insertion Pipe, though.
I'd prefer not needing to spend diamonds just to get things to go in an inventory first.If you know which items you'll be inserting, you can set up a Diamond Pipe to behave like an Insertion Pipe. Set the direction to a machine to accept the valid items. Set the inbound direction (where items will be coming from) to a "blocker" item - some random item you know will never pass through the system. Leave the outbound direction (where you want items to go if they can't fit in the machine) empty. This pipe will try to insert items into the machine, as it always prefers a direction with a specified item over a blank direction. If the item doesn't fit, it will bounce back. Since it can't go in the blocked direction, the only other valid choice is the outbound direction.
This works when you know which items will go in the machine, and can put them in the diamond pipe. It won't work, for example, for "all valid inputs to a furnace", as there's simply more of them than slots in a diamond pipe.
If you know which items you'll be inserting, you can set up a Diamond Pipe to behave like an Insertion Pipe. Set the direction to a machine to accept the valid items. Set the inbound direction (where items will be coming from) to a "blocker" item - some random item you know will never pass through the system. Leave the outbound direction (where you want items to go if they can't fit in the machine) empty. This pipe will try to insert items into the machine, as it always prefers a direction with a specified item over a blank direction. If the item doesn't fit, it will bounce back. Since it can't go in the blocked direction, the only other valid choice is the outbound direction.
This works when you know which items will go in the machine, and can put them in the diamond pipe. It won't work, for example, for "all valid inputs to a furnace", as there's simply more of them than slots in a diamond pipe.
This method randomly drops items every now and then as well. luckily we have redpower tubes now, and they never drop items. but yeah. insertion pipes would have been nice to have when setting up treefarms and such since the diamond pipe is a bit too expensive for that use. (altho the Logistics pipes did cost that much, but worked even better than the insertion pipes).
In my current builds i use a diamond pipe for the seed/sapling splitting, then have the output side go straight into a relay for further transport trough tubes. it feels a bit more cumbersome than having logistics pipes, but at least it's better than straight up buildcraft pipes. (altho i could do that and interface it trough a sorter chest. I also like to use barrels a lot in these builds to act as buffers. I'm currently working on a system to turn fabrication lines on and off depending on demand, but that would require counting the number of items sitting in a buffer barrrel/chest in order to test wither there was a need to craft more of an item or not. I guess i could do that manually for a while tho. a full barrel of humus is bound to last a good long while.