And an electrical engine can power anything from forestry that needs an engine?No, unless you use an Electrical Engine, an engine from forestry that will take EU (IC2) as an input and output MJ (Buildcraft)
Would I need to join it with any special types of wires?Yes, unless of course it uses more power than the Electrical Engine produces.
Thanks, sorry for all the wuestions, im new to forestryYou can either put the engine right against the machine, or use Golden Conductive Pipes/Redstone Energy Conduits.
Also FZ power.It also depends on which FTB pack you are playing. If you are playing Ultimate, you have access to the Power Converters mod, and can convert between IC/BC/UE/Steam as needed.
You can upgrade them (electrical engines) to put out up to 14 MJ/t, but at the cost of EU efficiency.Personally I dont recommend using the electrical engine as you need around 8 solar panels per engine (to keep it running well with a bit of extra EU in case of rain or night-time). It is far more profitable to use biomass (biogas engines). The best way would be the following: make a peat farm (powered with peat fired engines), then a tree farm (powered by peat engines) to get lots of saplings, then make some biomass. Biomass engines have a 5 MJ/t output vs the 2 MJ/t output of the electric engines
put your mouse over it, and hit the 'U' key on your keyboard, it will tell you all the recipes using it.What do you do with ash, that the Peat fired engines create?
I didnt know that, thanks, that will be usefulput your mouse over it, and hit the 'U' key on your keyboard, it will tell you all the recipes using it.
Personally I dont recommend using the electrical engine as you need around 8 solar panels per engine (to keep it running well with a bit of extra EU in case of rain or night-time). It is far more profitable to use biomass (biogas engines). The best way would be the following: make a peat farm (powered with peat fired engines), then a tree farm (powered by peat engines) to get lots of saplings, then make some biomass. Biomass engines have a 5 MJ/t output vs the 2 MJ/t output of the electric engines