Building length/width in air
Im trying to build a stone bridge over a river and was wondering how far in the air can you build with different materials HORIZONTALLY. Couldnt find any information about that, only build height. Im trying to make the bridge high and long enough so that the big boat can go through it
11:13 pm, April 20, 2022
Mharr replied to Building length/width in air April 22, 2022 @ 2:05:43 am PDT
Sort of but not really. Each piece has its own stats for how much stability it needs and can transmit, and larger pieces have bigger numbers so it works out about the same. Best to place the larger pieces on the bottom for the same reason you place stone under wood. Never tried it but I doubt the amount of beams matter - right?
11:13 am, April 22, 2022
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jonnin replied to Building length/width in air April 21, 2022 @ 8:22:06 pm PDT
its all about the ground. If you stuff the starting point into the terrain and go across to meed another tile stuffed into the terrain, and use ironwood supports, its about 20 or so 2x2 floor tiles. Additional support up from the ground or on the diagonal etc will add a bit more, but exceeding 30 by much without a true ground point somewhere else is going to be tricky. If you go up from ground and then across, it cuts your distance quickly.
5:13 am, April 22, 2022
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PakaNoHida replied to Building length/width in air April 21, 2022 @ 8:23:59 pm PDT
When you go up, you need braces... here is an example, a longboat fits under this during a storm.
If the diagonal braces were not up the structure would fall apart.
This is a lot of covered iron beam work.
https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=2766713006
If the diagonal braces were not up the structure would fall apart.
This is a lot of covered iron beam work.
https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=2766713006
5:13 am, April 22, 2022
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alpharius replied to Building length/width in air April 21, 2022 @ 5:19:59 pm PDT
Do truss bridges work or isn't the physics working this way?
2:16 am, April 22, 2022
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Mharr replied to Building length/width in air April 21, 2022 @ 5:31:23 pm PDT
Trusses, not even slightly. The only thing it cares about is how much abstract 'stability' score is transmitted through the parts connecting each element to the ground.
Diagonal beams bracing the span from below can help a little, because they're treated as vertical supports so effectively shorten the cantilever.
Diagonal beams bracing the span from below can help a little, because they're treated as vertical supports so effectively shorten the cantilever.
2:16 am, April 22, 2022
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alpharius replied to Building length/width in air April 21, 2022 @ 6:09:10 pm PDT
Trusses, not even slightly. The only thing it cares about is how much abstract 'stability' score is transmitted through the parts connecting each element to the ground.
Diagonal beams bracing the span from below can help a little, because they're treated as vertical supports so effectively shorten the cantilever.
Never tried it but I doubt the amount of beams matter - right?
2:16 am, April 22, 2022
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D I V I T Y replied to Building length/width in air April 21, 2022 @ 4:18:03 am PDT
thanks for nothing Honestly...just test it!
2:13 pm, April 21, 2022
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InsectWhore replied to Building length/width in air April 21, 2022 @ 5:10:15 am PDT
2:13 pm, April 21, 2022
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Mharr replied to Building length/width in air April 21, 2022 @ 5:14:15 am PDT
That image is a perfect example, stone for the vertical support and core wood for the span. Possibly with an iron frame (and some hidden earthworks inside the towers) that could be stone flooring for the entire horizontal part, but that's tricky. Stone in particular does *not* like going sideways.
2:13 pm, April 21, 2022
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Meow replied to Building length/width in air April 21, 2022 @ 5:40:17 am PDT
2:13 pm, April 21, 2022
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Mharr replied to Building length/width in air April 20, 2022 @ 11:31:47 pm PDT
In general about 1/8 as far as you can build vertically. Bridges pretty much require stone and core wood if you want space underneath and iron makes a huge difference.
Note that horizontal support is cumulative, the first piece that falls will probably hold as part of a completed span, so temporary vertical supports are a thing.
Note that horizontal support is cumulative, the first piece that falls will probably hold as part of a completed span, so temporary vertical supports are a thing.
8:13 am, April 21, 2022
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Frozztastic replied to Building length/width in air April 20, 2022 @ 6:33:58 pm PDT
Honestly...just test it!
2:13 am, April 21, 2022
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sarteck replied to Building length/width in air April 20, 2022 @ 11:40:41 am PDT
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gD3YQGufXgA
This is a bit of an older video, but Firespark's videos are generally pretty good as far as facts go. (I disagree with a lot of his opinions, but he's got a great way of explaining the fundementals.)
This is a bit of an older video, but Firespark's videos are generally pretty good as far as facts go. (I disagree with a lot of his opinions, but he's got a great way of explaining the fundementals.)
11:13 pm, April 20, 2022
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