Trying to run a GT HV Steam Turbine, it requires 52,000 L/sec of steam. A GT Huge Stainless Steel Fluid Pipe provides 28,800 L/s of steam, so I'll need two of them. But I have to run them side-by-side from the RC tank, without a block between them. Will this work or will it cause problems? I use GT Shutters, should I put a shutter between the two pipes all the way along the line? What mode should the Shutter be in? Do we want the steam flows to combine and act as one mega pipe carrying 57,600 liters or do we want to keep the two flows separate and avoid mixing them?
Also, what does the mode mean on the Shutters that says "Open if work disabled"?
Edit: Ran pipes side by side and def had some steam supply issues. So I found a way to stagger the RC valves and ran one pipe one level lower so they never connect up, and now the HV turbine is hummin' at full power and full steam. So it appears you should always avoid combining GT fluid pipes if possible.
Edit 2: Goodness, these numbers are way out of hand. LOL My Titanium GT Large Boiler outputs 32,000 L/s of steam and I have a turbine that uses 52,000 L/s. Even the top-tier Tungstensteel Large Boiler only provides 40,000 L/s. If I use my 16-LV-Steam-Turbine setup to get HV via transformers, the steam cost is only 16*2040=32,640 L/s instead of 52,000, and suddenly my Titanium Boiler can keep up with it as long as I don't run anything else. Sometimes you have to run these experiments and learn the hard way - I just learned as I type this. My HV Steam Turbine is def going back into a chest and I'll adapt my 16-LV turbine setup to run the EBF instead. Yes, I know we've discussed this Steam Turbine efficiency thing numerous times in the thread, but like I say... sometimes you only learn by experiencing it first-hand.