Anthony Roberts wrote:So? Use your Coal to smelt Iron, and use that wood you have to purify the propane. If anything, you're benifiting, so shh! Don't tell anyone.
Now, tell me why I would use my wood to purify propane, when using the coal is more efficient, and wood is comparatively more useful. This change is most definitely not what I wanted from this thread.
Anthony Roberts wrote: Now, as for balancing this out, it's obvious that's what you want done. Tell me, what values do you think would be perferred? Not that I'll use them or anything *Snicker*, I just want to know where you're getting these calculations from. You must realise, that, you can't make all calculations from numbers and gathering quantities. There is distance, supply and demand, and all these other economical things to balance out (Whatever they may be, I really don't know or remember >.>).
These calculations are based on the base gathering values of said materials, the quantity of materials used and the production rate of iron and propane. I discounted distance on the basis that coal is required inboth calculations, as are limestone and iron ore. The gas is the only difference, and I assume that very few people would use gas if isn't local.
Anthony Roberts wrote:As for your question, "Why the devaluation of propane?", I can answer that if you can elaborate on that. By devaluation, you're asking why propane is worse than coal or something? I'm just not quite understanding.
No I mean that it used to worth more. Now the values have been changed so it is not so efficient; it used to produce 75g of iron instead of 50g, thereby giving it an advantage over coal. And advantage now removed. I was wondering why those vlaues changed.
Anthony Roberts wrote:That very much is the whole point. You make the machine, as a down payment in a sense, and you get propane to use cheaper than coal. In a non literal sense.
Yes, but propane isn't cheaper. This may have changed slightly now with wood being used instead of coal, but a few days ago it cost more in terms of resources used and days taken to produce it. You make the down payment of a purifier (which aren't all that cheap) and you are rewarded with a less efficient alternative to coal.
Solfius wrote:I'm sure there are plenty of ways of doing things which aren't effective, that's why no one does them that way, but someone has to do it first to find out.
I did the research, spent the resources, and it was more effective. Then someone decided to change it... Why?
Why did the values change?