Also, if you put the material into the part builder, even if it won't 'work' it should tell you the modifiers on the right hand side.
Not enough people know this. Another good way is the Portable tank. Just place it on the Drain and wrench it to auto output.FYI: You can make obsidian in the smeltery by pouring in water and lava in equal quantities. Put a drain facing up on the top level and a tank of any sort diagonally and a faucet on that tank with the drain under it. Bucket water into the tank and drain it into the smeltery. Bucket equal amount of lava and drain that next. Ding, molten obsidian free of charge. Doesn't use any lava from the fuel tank.
Yeah other mods kinda break the balance there. If you only had Tinkers' Construct the only way to get steel would be melting down full durability chain armor in the smeltery.I skip Alumite altogether by using Steel. Its fast, durable, and usually available (via chest loot, or IC2 refined iron pack depending), not to mention It can mine obsidian. It even does decent damage as a sword blade.
There is a smeltery alloy recipe for that. Look up recipes for molten steel. Although it's not like it makes it too different, induction smelter isn't really that difficult to make and you can use pulverized charcoal to make steel in it.I just wish there was a recipe to make it using iron and liquefacted coal from TE.
Working as intended. The durability of the tool determines how high flux storage you can have as well.Totally noob question here.
I thought that by using a flux capacitor I didn't have to worry about native durability anymore so my second pickaxe is:
Alumite head
paper binding
paper rod
flux capacitor - for some reason it would only accept a leadstone flux capacitor - not higher tier one. Is this normal?
fill up with red stone and lapis
Am still using a bronze sledgehammer thing otherwise with a leadstone energy cell and loads of redstone - was just going to upgrade similar to the above minus the lapis.
am I doing something wrong?
Working as intended. The durability of the tool determines how high flux storage you can have as well.