Electric engine unit: Difference between revisions
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{{ | {{:Infobox:Electric engine unit}} | ||
An '''Electric engine unit''' is the advanced counterpart of the [[engine unit]], and is used in some higher end recipes. | |||
Note that [[lubricant]] requires a [[chemical plant]] to be created, and [[engine unit]]s require [[assembling machine]]s, so electric engines cannot be built by hand from raw materials. | |||
== Trivia == | |||
*Although the electric engine unit is clearly depicted as an electric motor, it is apparently just a lubricated combustion engine. | |||
== History == | |||
{{history|0.9.0| | |||
* Introduced}} | |||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
* [[Engine unit]] | * [[Engine unit]] | ||
{{IntermediateNav}} | |||
{{C|Components}} |
Latest revision as of 11:27, 23 May 2023
Electric engine unit |
Recipe |
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+ + + → | |
Total raw |
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+ + + + | |
Stack size |
50 |
400 (8 stacks) |
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Prototype type |
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Internal name |
electric-engine-unit |
Required technologies |
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Produced by |
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Consumed by |
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An Electric engine unit is the advanced counterpart of the engine unit, and is used in some higher end recipes.
Note that lubricant requires a chemical plant to be created, and engine units require assembling machines, so electric engines cannot be built by hand from raw materials.
Trivia
- Although the electric engine unit is clearly depicted as an electric motor, it is apparently just a lubricated combustion engine.
History
- 0.9.0:
- Introduced