Fuel
Fuel can be inserted into burner devices and burned to power them. Different types of Fuel provide different amounts of energy, measured in megajoules (MJ). A megajoule (MJ) is equivalent to one megawatt second (MWs), so dividing the megajoule (MJ) value by the power consumption in megawatts (MW) gives the time the fuel will last.
Types
This is a list of all items usable as fuel in burner devices, ordered by fuel value:
Item | Fuel value | Fuel value per raw total | Vehicle acceleration bonus | Vehicle max speed |
---|---|---|---|---|
Wood | 2 MJ | 4 MJ per raw wood | 100% | 259.2 km/h |
Raw wood | 4 MJ | 4 MJ per raw wood | 100% | 259.2 km/h |
Small electric pole | 4 MJ | 4 MJ per raw wood | 100% | 259.2 km/h |
Wooden chest | 6 MJ | 3 MJ per raw wood | 100% | 259.2 km/h |
Coal | 8 MJ | 8 MJ per coal | 100% | 259.2 km/h |
Solid fuel | 25 MJ | 20 MJ per unit of Crude oil¹ | 120% | 272.2 km/h |
Rocket fuel | 225 MJ | 180% | 298.1 km/h | |
Uranium fuel cell | 8 GJ² | 507 MJ per Uranium ore³ | Unusable | Unusable |
(¹) This assumes the Crude oil is processed completely into Solid fuel, using Advanced oil processing and Heavy oil cracking as intermediate steps, but not Light oil cracking. Less efficient methods are possible. In practice, the Petroleum Gas part of processed crude oil is more likely to be used for something other than Solid fuel.
(²) This fuel type can only be used in a nuclear reactor. Unlike other fuel types, it can't be placed into standard burners.
(³) Assuming that all U-238 is enriched, all used up cells are reprocessed, and there is no reactor neighbor bonus.
History
- 0.15.0:
- Fuel type affects vehicle acceleration and top speed.