Solid fuel: Difference between revisions
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Solid Fuel can be created from [[heavy oil]], [[light oil]] or [[petroleum gas]]. | Solid Fuel can be created from [[heavy oil]], [[light oil]] or [[petroleum gas]]. | ||
[[Light oil]] has the best oil to solid fuel ratio (10:1). Cracking heavy oil to light oil first changes the ratio for heavy oil to 13:1. | [[Light oil]] has the best oil to solid fuel ratio (10:1). Cracking heavy oil to light oil first changes the ratio for heavy oil to 13:1 (from 20:1). | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" |
Latest revision as of 12:40, 22 April 2022
Solid fuel |
Stack size |
50 |
Fuel value |
12 MJ (burner) |
Vehicle acceleration |
120% |
Vehicle top speed |
105% |
Prototype type |
|
Internal name |
solid-fuel |
Required technologies |
|
Produced by |
|
Consumed by |
|
Used as fuel by |
|
Solid fuel is a kind of fuel and is processed in a chemical plant. One unit of solid fuel contains 12MJ of energy, three times the energy value of coal.
Besides being useful as fuel in all burner devices, solid fuel is also used to produce rocket fuel, which is a component of rocket parts built in the rocket silo.
Recipes
Solid Fuel can be created from heavy oil, light oil or petroleum gas. Light oil has the best oil to solid fuel ratio (10:1). Cracking heavy oil to light oil first changes the ratio for heavy oil to 13:1 (from 20:1).
Process | Input | Output |
---|---|---|
+ | ||
+ | ||
+ |
History
- 0.17.0:
- Relative value of solid fuel decreased by 4%.
- 0.15.0:
- Fuel type now affects vehicle acceleration and top speed.
- 0.9.0:
- Introduced