Transport belts

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Revision as of 16:30, 21 October 2014 by Ssilk (talk | contribs) (→‎Basic)
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< Belt transport system

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Items

belt-type factor speed speed (tiles/sec) needed research
Basic transport belt 1 1.875 none
Fast transport belt 2 3.75 Logistics 2
Express transport belt 3 5.625 Logistics 3

Related: Splitters, Underground belts Nearby : Inserters, Storages, Transport belts/Physics


Basic

Task: make a steady flow of items from your Mining drills to the Furnaces.

  • Select a belt by taking a Storages/Stack from your Inventory
  • Rotate the belt by pressing "R" until it faces the right direction.
  • Place the belt (by default left mouse)
  • Move in the direction you want the belt to go, and hold down the left mouse button: the belt continues to be placed.


In-place-replacement

If you have placed a belt in the wrong direction you don't need to dismantle it.

  • Make sure your game-hand is empty and then simply press 'R' over the piece and it will change on the spot.
  • This in-place-replacement is also possible with other belt-types. Pick up a faster belt type and place it over the current: The belt is picked up and replaced with that in your hand.
  • Many more things can be in-place-replaced: Poles, Chests, Inserters, Assemblies, Furnaces...

Advanced


Turns / Bends

Turns will always keep the alignment of items. Be aware; the inner side of the turn moves items at half the speed, meaning turns are likely to be bottlenecks. Using faster belts at the bend is recommended to maintain capacity of your network.

See also



Belt Lanes: using two sides

Belts have two lanes that can be used for transporting. This allows for either a double flow of one material, or with some careful setup, transporting two different materials on the same belt.

See also


Speed, Density and Througput: About finding the bottlenecks

This is a mistake often made - even by advanced players. But first we need to introduce some definitions:

  • Speed
How fast does a belt move. This influences of course the throughput. The speed is easy to calculate: Basic transport belt is the slowest, the Fast transport belt is twice as fast as the basic and the Express transport belt is 3x the speed of basic.
  • Density
How tight are the items put on the belts. See Transport belts/Optimizing for tips, how to keep the density as tight as possible. See Transport belts/Physics about how dense you can put the items on the belts.
  • Throughput
This is speed * density. The maximum density on all belts are nearly equal (indeed the density on faster belts is lower, see Transport Belt physics).

This formula

 Throughput = Speed * density

gives you two opportunities to enhance the throughput:

  • More speed
  • more density.

More speed is expensive (see optimizing with parallel belts), so more density is in many cases much easier to obtain. The way is in most cases, to find the bottleneck.

The bottleneck can be seen quite easy, if there is a part of a belt, where the items sometimes stop or don't move (or don't move fast) at maximum density and suddenly they come to a point, where this "stop and go" releases itself and they run free and are not so tight on the belt. This is in most cases the exact place, where you need to optimize your belts. It doesn't make sense to optimize much before or after this point, because if you fix it, you will find the next bottleneck anywhere else.

Side inserts (Crossings)

When belts join together at a t-junction, items are inserted from the side and they stay on the side of the belt they came from.

See also

Expert

Fully optimising transport belts can be a tricky but satisfying task as your factory increases in both complexity and material volume. Use some of the pages below to help you.

Special behaviour

Other Usages

Useless knowledge

Special usages

See also


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