Difference between revisions of "Old Material Science"

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{{Historical|Notes=For the current version, see [[Ore Processing|Material science]].}}
{{Location
{{Location
|Picture=OreProcessing3.png
|Picture=OreProcessing7.png
|Function=Metallurgist's paradise.
|Function=Metallurgist's paradise.
|Access=Everybody
|Access=Everybody
}}
}}
 
Turning raw ores or metal bars into weird, fancy alloys is possible with the help of an arc smelter. The public one (and the main subject of this guide) is located between the [[Engineering|engine cold loop room]] and the [[Cargo_Bay|cargo bay]] airlock. The [[Miner|mining department]] has access to two arc smelters: one near the mineral magnet and another smelting room is tucked away in the derelict [[Mining Outpost|mining outpost]].  
This small room is home to the arc smelter, which can be used to turn raw ores or metal bars into weird, fancy alloys. It's located between the [[Engineering|engine cold loop room]] and the [[Cargo_Bay|cargo bay]] airlock. Public access is (temporarily) through an open wall in the back of the storage room left of the cargo bay.


== So fucking metal! ==
== So fucking metal! ==
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The devices scattered around the room are as follows:
The devices scattered around the room are as follows:


'''Arc Smelter''': This giant contraption in the back of the room is where dreams are made. Simply insert a material into the smelter by clicking it with the desired material in your hand, then click the smelter with an empty hand to refine that material into an alloy bar, then click it again to retrieve the bar. Up to two materials can be loaded to make a combination alloy that combines the functionality of both materials (i.e. combing a metal and a crystal will have it be recognized as both metal ''and'' crystal). Note that every use of the smelter causes slag to build up inside of it which, if not removed, will decrease the quality of each successive alloy. Remove slag by clicking the smelter with the slag shovel. Then you can use the slag as a material if you want, I guess. Most compatible materials are listed [[Guide to Mining|here]], though you can also use obscure things like gold. Experiment!
'''Arc Smelter''': This giant contraption in the back of the room is where dreams are made. Simply insert a material into the smelter by clicking it with the desired material in your hand, then click the smelter with an empty hand to refine that material into an alloy bar, then click it again to retrieve the bar. Up to two materials can be loaded to make a combination alloy that combines the functionality of both materials (i.e. combining a metal and a crystal will have it be recognized as both metal ''and'' crystal). Note that every use of the smelter causes slag to build up inside of it which, if not removed, will decrease the quality of each successive alloy and cause smoke to billow out of the smelter until it's fixed. Remove slag by clicking the smelter with the slag shovel. Most compatible materials are listed [[Guide to Mining|here]], though you can also use obscure things like the removed slag, gold or even human flesh with a willing donor. Experiment!
 
'''Fabrication Unit''': The janky-looking thing on the right side of the smelter. This is where you insert your alloy bars to make stuff. Most schematics require either metal alloys, fabrics, rubber, leather or crystals. A single bar can be made to fill all needs.


'''Fabrication Unit''': The janky-looking thing on the right side of the smelter. This is where you insert your alloy bars to make stuff. Most schematics will only need metal alloys, though a couple will need fabric (fabric/fibrilith or an alloy mixed with it) or crystal (molitz, plasmastone, cytine, telecrystal or starstone) as well. A single bar will fulfill each requirement.
'''Material Recombobulator''': The computer to the smelter's left, a creative tool for the [[Chemistry|chemists]]. Pour a chemical into it and you can then treat the alloy in that chemical, applying its effects (and in the case of certain chems, stat alterations) to the final product; the more you use, the greater the effect, and rarer chemicals tend to have more interesting effects. You'll have to test with lots of chemicals to see what does what! '''Sadly this is being revamped and doesn't work at the moment, so try not to insert reagents into it that you can't get back for now.'''


'''Additive barrel''': The barrel to the smelter's left. A creative tool for the [[Chemistry|chemists]] to make use of, this will mix an inserted reagent with an alloy bar when it's created in the smelter, applying the reagent's effects to the final product. The barrel may only contain one reagent at a time, and the more reagent you used, the greater the effect. '''Note that this a work in progress and that not all reagent-mixed alloys work correctly at the moment.'''
'''Loom''': Accepts fibrilith, [[Guide to Botany#Available Crops|cotton]] and other fabrics. You can also recycle regular jumpsuits and shoes.


'''Material analyzer''': The computer terminal at the west side of the room tells you all sorts of info about a material, such as its resistance to damage, its value, what happens when you wear it, etc. Just click on it with a hand containing the material in question; both alloy bars and stuff made from alloy bars work.
'''Material analyzer''': The hand-held devices on the table next to the general manufacturer can scan and tell you all sorts of info about a material such as its resistance to damage, its value, if it has any unique quirks, etc. You can use it on most materials as well as most things made with the smelter, loom, fabricators and workbenches.


'''General Manufacturer''': These are found all over the station, really. As you'd expect from the name they're supposed to be used for producing general objects, but in Ore Processing all it does is store mauxite, pharosium and molitz bars for you to toss into the smelter.
'''[[Making_and_Breaking#General_Manufacturer|General Manufacturer]]''': These are found all over the station, really. As you'd expect from the name they're supposed to be used for producing general objects, but in Ore Processing it's more for material storage so people don't dump a huge mess of materials all over the room. Comes with a couple bars worth of mauxite, pharosium and molitz to get you started.


== Oh god what are all these numbers? ==
== oh god what are all these numbers ==


The material analyzer spits out a lot of information about a material when it's scanned. It's all explained in the "Dummies guide to material science" book on the table, but for the sake of completion it might as well be listed here too:
The material analyzer spits out a lot of information about a material when it's scanned.


''Siemens coefficient'': Conductivity rating. Ranges from 0 to 1, with 0 meaning non-conductive and 1 meaning perfectly conductive. Less conductivity means less damage and stun from electricity.
'''Not all of these entries may be correct, be warned! If anyone has corrections to make, please do so!'''
<br>''Heat transfer coefficient'': How well heat is kept in the material. 0 means it never loses heat, and goes up to 1 which means heat transfers through it immediately. Spacesuits have this set to 0.1, for example.
{| class="wikitable"
<br>''Thermal conductivity'': Basically Heat transfer coefficient as it would apply to floors and walls. This isn't always the same as the former, so pay attention to it if you're making a room.  
!Property!!Explanation!!Notes
<br>''Temperature Protection'': How well the material protects from heat if worn. If your current temperature exceeds this value, you will start taking burn damage.
|-
<br>''Heat capacity'': This is ''probably'' the limit before an Atmos Tank of this material ruptures from too much heat, but due to the atmosphere coding being mangled beyond recognition it no longer applies. Need confirmation.
|Value||The selling value of the material.||Some alloys are more valuable in bar form than they are as their base material.
<br>''Permeability coefficient'': How well the material resists chemicals. 0 means fully resistant, 1 means it might as well be thin air. Biosuits lean towards 0.
|-
<br>''Disease resistance'': Exactly what it says on the tin, this is how well the material resists diseases of any sort when worn. Unlike the above, 0 means it's completely powerless against disease, while 100 means completely resistant.
|Radioactivity||How much radiation the material puts off. The higher this value is, the more RAD you take from it.||Standing on something made of radioactive material or (obviously) wearing it will apply radiation to you.
<br>''Melee Protection'': How well the material protects you from being whacked with stuff. Protects both health and stamina. Higher is better.
|-
<br>''Bullet Protection'': Get shot with a bullet, divide the original damage with this value, and the new value is how much damage you actually take. Again, higher is better.
|Electrical conductivity||How well electricity passes through the material. Ranges from 0 to 1, with 0 meaning non-conductive and 1 meaning perfectly conductive.||You'll usually see conductive materials in wires.
<br>''Explosion resistance'': The more of this the material has, the safer things behind it (''not'' what is made of it) are from explosions. This only applies to walls.
|-
<br>''Explosion protection'': ''This'' is protection for the material itself. The higher this is, the less damage, stun and chance of limb loss the wearer takes from explosions.
|Thermal conductivity||How well heat passes through the material. 0 means no heat escapes it, 1 means it loses heat in a heartbeat.||Spacesuits have this set to 0.1.
<br>''Radiation Proof'': Whether or not the material protects from radiation. A simple Yes or No.
|-
<br>''Magical'': For [[Wizard]]s, this is if the material lets you channel magic when worn. The more magical stuff you wear, the less time your skills take to cool down! Again, a simple Yes or No.
|Quality||The higher the value, the more the infused chemical will transfer on hit.||Meaningless until the material recombobulator is made to work again.
<br>''Value'': Want to sell the alloy bars instead? This is how valuable the bar is.
|-
<br>''Damage'': The higher this value is, the more damage it does when you whack someone with it.
|Instability||How likely the material is to break, safely or catastrophically, when struck by a regular attack.||Erebite is known for being ''very'' unstable.
<br>''Quality'': The higher this is, the higher the rest of the material's stats will be.
|-
<br>''Durability'': Works off of a "# out of #" system. It decreases as the material is hit, and when it reaches 0, one of two things happen: the material no longer blocks damage nearly as well, or it outright breaks (this is only for certain things, like windows being beaten with a toolbox).
|Hardness||How much damage the material does if you whack someone with it.||Works wonderfully on powerful melee weapons like fire extinguishers and toolboxes.
<br>''Hardness'': How hard the object is, obviously. This is a modifier for certain values, and depending on what you're making, you may want either less or more.
|-
<br>''"Material has unique properties."'': This will only display when the material has a certain quirk to it that doesn't fit under the rest of the info. This includes obscure stuff like Molitz being see-through or Telecrystal randomly warping you. Experiment to see what does what.
|Toughness||How much melee damage is negated by the material when worn, such as from blunt objects and thrown items.||This is only if you're struck in the place where the worn material is; body armor alone won't do much if the attacker goes for your face instead.
<br>''Autoignition temperature'': Once the temperature in the area reaches this value, the material will catch on fire and, if not put out, will be reduced to ash.
|-
<br>''Burn output'': How much energy it puts off when burning. Think char ore in the furnace.
|Permeability||How well the material handles most chemicals. The lower the value is, the less likely it is that chems will reach you if splashed on you.||Biosuits have this really low.
|-
|Tensile strength||Resistance to bladed weapons like knives and [[Syndicate_Items#Cyalume_Saber|C-Sabers]].||The higher this is, the less likely you are to bleed when hit.
|-
|Compressive strength||Resistance to bullets. The higher the value is, the less damage bullets do, as well as being less likely to get the bullet lodged in you.||[[Murder#Guns|Armor-Piercing (AP) rounds]] always ignore this stat, be advised!
|-
|Shear strength||Resistance to explosions. The higher this is, the less damage you take from explosions, and the less likely the material is to be destroyed<br>by them.||
|-
|Flammability||Fire resistance. The lower this is, the less BURN you take from fire and heat.||Environmental heat can still murder your lungs without internals, however!
|-
|Energy||How much power the material puts off when used as a fuel or energy source.||
|-
|Corrosion resistance||The higher this value is, the less likely material is to be reduced to goo when it comes in contact with an acid.||People like to splash acids onto your headgear.
|-
|Reflectivity||Resistance to lasers. The higher this is, the less BURN you take from them.||Sadly, it doesn't actually bounce lasers off of you. (Probably should though?)
|-
|Scattering||The chance of the material breaking into pieces of scrap when destroyed.||Scraps can be recycled into usable materials using a [[General_Objects#Reclaimer|portable reclaimer]].
|-
|Transparency||How see-through the material is.||Useless, but nonetheless neat.
|-
|Melting point||How high of a temperature a material can take before it burns away.||Materials that simply ''can't'' burn are given a message stating as such instead of a value.
|-
|Superconductive Temp.||If the material exceeds this temperature, electricity will pass right through it.||Mostly pointless, but it has a niche use in building walls for a safe area from arc flashes, like say if some traitor hotwired the engine.
|-
|Permittivity||How susceptible a material is to EMPs and other electrical issues.||Pods really appreciate a high amount of this due to most electrical attacks shorting out their systems.
|-
|Dielectric strength||How well the material works as insulation.||Mostly used for wires, but clothing with a high value of this will cause electricity to do less damage to you. Insulated gloves have this very high.
|-
|Luminosity||How much light the material produces.||Self-explanatory, but rare.
|-
|Unique properties||Notes whether or not the material in question has anything special about it that doesn't fit under the other entries. This doesn't appear at all<br>if there are no specialties to speak of.||These can range from teleporting you randomly to color-shifting and so on. Experiment to see what does what!
|}


== That's nice, now what can I make? ==
== That's nice, now what can I make? ==


{| class="wikitable"
The Fabrication Unit have a bunch of neat blueprints in them:
!Product!!Requirements!!Description!
{| class="wikitable sortable"
!Product!!class="unsortable" | Requirements!!class="unsortable" | Location!!class="unsortable" | Description!
|-
|Glass sheet x10||1x Crystal alloy||Ore processing<br>Waste Disposal||Dissatisfied with the flimsy glass that the station uses? Whip up some of your own with your sturdier alloys.
|-
|Metal sheet x10||1x Metal alloy||Ore processing<br>Waste Disposal||Make floors, walls, lockers, crates, etc.
|-
|Jumpsuit||1x Fabric alloy||Ore processing<br>Waste Disposal||Someone steal your jumpsuit? Whip up a new one laced with whatever materials you want, it can provide surprisingly good defense!
|-
|Slag shovel||1x Metal alloy||Ore processing<br>Waste Disposal||Did someone steal the shovel that came with the room? Teach them a lesson by beating them over the head with a newer, stronger one.
|-
|Emergency Toolbox||1x Metal alloy||Ore processing<br>Waste Disposal||Comes with a crowbar, a flashlight, a station bounced radio and a fire extinguisher, all forged from the material of the bar used to make the toolbox.
|-
|Fire Extinguisher||1x Metal alloy||Ore processing<br>Waste Disposal||A custom made fire extinguisher. Custom made for what? Hell if I know. To explode on use, or to poison who ever picks it up. Use your imagination.
|-
|Shoes||1x Fabric alloy||Ore processing<br>Waste Disposal||Not very protective, but now you can pimp your footwear or turn them into chem dispensers.
|-
|Gloves||1x Fabric alloy||Medbay<br>Engineering||More useful than you might think, giving gloves a high Damage value improves the power of your punches. Giving them a high Dielectric strength also makes them act like [[Engineering Objects#Insulated Gloves|insulated gloves]], neat!
|-
|Pod Armor||3x Metal alloy<br>1x Crystal alloy||EVA||One of the main reasons to get into smelting: [[Space Pod|Pod]] personalizing! Durability, speed and crew capacity depend on the materials used.<br>'''Note:''' The alloy stats used for the Plating part of the armor are the only thing the game checks for in calculations (damage, atmospherics, unique properties, coloring, etc.). The other alloys are only used in construction and nothing else.
|-
|Spacesuit||2x Metal alloy<br>2x Fabric alloy||EVA||Useful for making spacesuits that can take a beating from the monsters and radiation that lurks in space.
|-
|Gas mask||1x Fabric alloy||EVA<br>Engineering||Turn your internals into makeshift armor.
|-
|Mechanical Toolbox||1x Metal alloy||EVA||Comes with complete set of tools all in the same alloy as used for the toolbox.
|-
|Electrical Toolbox||1x Metal alloy||Engineering||All parts made in the compound of your choice.
|-
|Firesuit||1x Fabric alloy||Engineering||Protects against temperature change and can be tailored to be form of armor.
|-
||Heavy Armor||1x Metal alloy<br>1x Crystal alloy||Security||The other main reason to use the smelter: a super-tough exosuit! Become an armored giant that can shrug off all kinds of abuse to anything not aimed directly at your head, carrying innate defense boosts even before factoring in material stats.<br>Slightly slows you down when you wear it unless you have another kind of speed-boosting effect active. Remember that this is ''not'' a spacesuit and will not protect you against the cold of space on its own... unless you can give it a low<br>Thermal conductivity, of course.<br>'''Note:''' Like the Pod Armor, only the Plating alloy stats are applied in the game's calculations.
|-
||Stun Baton||1x Metal alloy||Security||Traditionally used to stun people, but with the use of a fabricator you can now make a baton infused with coffee to help with your crippling coffee addiction, or you could make a baton out of pure gold to truly show those criminals who's the man.
|-
||Handcuffs||1x Metal alloy||Security||Home made handcuffs can be pretty mean to the person stuck wearing them, depending on what they're made from.
|-
||Watering Can||1x Metal alloy||Botany||Container for water and just about everything else you might want to stuff in there.
|-
||Chainsaw||1x Metal alloy<br>1x Energy source||Botany||Used for carving up plants and people. Nastier alloys are nastier to plants and people.
|-
|-
|Glass sheet x10||1x Crystal alloy||Dissatisfied with the flimsy glass that the station uses? Whip up some of your own with your sturdier alloys.
||Labcoat||1x Fabric alloy||Medbay<br>Research||Protects against diseases, and can now be tailored to protect against even more stuff.
|-
|-
|Metal sheet x10||1x Metal alloy||Make super-tough floor and walls, reinforce borgs, etc.
||Gas Tank||1x Metal alloy||Medbay||Regular gas tank that can now be built to withstand explosions... or cause explosions, and much more.
|-
|-
|Jumpsuit||1x Fabric alloy||Plain old jumpsuits, except not really since you can make them out of whatever the hell you want with the wonderful power of metallurgy.
||Beaker Box||1x Crystal alloy||Research||Box of beakers, all the beakers will be in the material of your choice.
|-
|-
|Heavy Armor||1x Metal alloy<br>1x Crystal alloy||A super-tough exosuit. Become a hulking, nigh-indestructible giant. Note that this is ''not'' a spacesuit and will not protect you against the cold of space on its own.
||Atmos Canister||1x Metal alloy||Research||Tired of having your tanks rupture in the [[Plasma Research|Toxins lab]] from too much pressure? This is for you.
|-
|-
|Slag shovel||1x Metal alloy||Has a fringe use if someone steals the original slag shovel, but otherwise is a ''great'' melee weapon.
||Cutlery set||1x Metal alloy||Bar||Knife, spoon, fork, the complete works. All in your alloy of choice.
|-
|-
|Pod Armor||3x Metal alloy<br>1x Crystal alloy||No more scrounging up materials for a super-tough pod, now you can make one yourself! Acts like the [[Space Pod#Pod_Armor|Light Pod Armor]] in terms of speed and capacity.
||Drinking glass||1x Crystal alloy||Bar||Drink from a golden cup.
|-
|-
|Atmos Tank||1x Metal alloy||Tired of having your tanks rupture in the [[Plasma Research|Toxins lab]] from too much pressure? This is for you.
||Plate||1x Crystal alloy||Bar||Make armor-plated plates. Tap them on someone's head.
|-
|-
|Gloves||1x Fabric alloy||More useful than you might think, giving gloves a high Damage value improves the power of your punches. Giving them a Siemens coefficient (conductivity) of 0 also makes them act like [[Clothing#Gloves|insulated gloves]], neat!<br>'''Note''': I'm not sure if this will allow you to make stun gloves out of them. Experiment!?
||Rolling pin||1x Metal alloy||Bar||The [[chef]]'s tool of choice. Now available in multiple alloys.
|}
|}
Most departments have their own fabricators for other job-specific stuff. Go check out what your department has access to, you might find something you like! You can also add a blueprint to a fabricator to permanently unlock a new item, but you have to find one first.


== So where do I get all the stuff I need? ==
== So where do I get all the stuff I need? ==


Procuring the right materials can be a bit luck-based. Sometimes the [[Quartermaster]] will get special materials from trades, and the Merchants that come by shuttle can also have some goods. In most rounds however you'll be relying on the [[Miner|Miners]], whom you should yell at to bring materials to the smelter if they have nothing better to do (they usually don't). If you yourself are a Miner, then keep what you want to use for yourself and bring the rest of your spoils to the smelter.
Procuring the right materials can be a bit luck-based. Sometimes the [[Quartermaster]] will get special materials from trades, and the Merchants that come by shuttle can also have some goods. In most rounds however you'll be relying on the [[Miner|Miners]], whom you should yell at regularly to bring materials to the smelter since they're literally just down the hall from Ore Processing.


As for what materials you actually ''want'', it really depends on what you're making and why. Heavy Armor and Pod Armor should be made as damage-resistant as possible, so they enjoy materials with high defensive numbers like bohrum and uqill. Gloves and Jumpsuits will always need fabric/fibrilith, and while Gloves are obviously useless for defense short of making them non-conductive, the right additive and a high Damage value can give you a surprising edge in unarmed combat. If you're selling stuff, forget about the other stats and try to ramp up Value as much as possible. Find materials with high or low values and experiment in making them better. Your imagination is key here.
As for what materials you actually ''want'', it really depends on what you're making and why. Here are some baselines:
 
*Floors, walls, grilles and the like? Make metal sheets out of something with a high resistance to explosions. These can't [[Admin|(normally)]] be destroyed with melee or bullets, so explosives are the only thing you need to worry about.
*Heavy Armor? You will want to mash together as many high protective stats as you can. A properly-smelted Heavy Armor is hands-down the most defensively robust piece of wearable gear in the game, and you can't skimp on defense if someone is on a homicidal rampage, whether the rampager is you or someone else.
*Pod Armor and windows? Stack on protection from explosions and bullets. Protection from melee damage is nigh-pointless for Pods since most of the harmful stuff they deal with is ranged or shouldn't reach them to begin with; just beware of AP rounds. As for the windows, it's not hard for people to find a Screwdriver and Crowbar to displace them with, so firefights and explosions should be your priority.
**Note that you ''can'' produce reinforced alloy glass with regular metal rods. You don't need to go out of your way for exotic metal rods if you don't want to (though it ''does'' help).
*Gloves and Jumpsuits? These will ''always'' need at least one piece of fibrilith/fabric (they're counted as the same thing) per construct, so bother Hydroponics/the Head of Personnel/the Miners for some. Human flesh is an acceptable substitute if someone suicided into the smelter.
*Atmos Tanks? Go for resistance to whacking, exploding and heat: whacking makes it not break from holding too much gas, exploding makes it not be damaged by ''other'' exploding canisters, and heat keeps it stable when another canister starts releasing flaming gas. These are all common dangers in the Toxins mixing lab.
*Slag shovel? Well... let's be honest, the only reasons you'll be making this are if 1) someone steals the original shovel (rare, but it happens), or 2) as a melee weapon. If it's the latter, grab something with a shit-ton of Hardness and go to town.
*Selling stuff? Your only focus should be on Value.
 
All of this is, of course, subject to change depending on your objective and motives. You'll have to discover suitable materials for yourself, but after that it's all up to your imagination.


== Alright, I got all that. Now how do I become indestructible? ==
== Alright, I got all that. Now how do I become indestructible? ==


Among the vast amount of ores and gems out there, there are a few that are always welcome in the processing room:
Indeed, no crafting system is without a few advanced tricks. Here are some things to know:
 
*When you combine two materials, their stats average out. Let's say one material had a Hardness of 3 and another had 7; if you mixed them, the combined alloy would have a Hardness of 5.
*Merged materials will take on a mix-and-match name of whatever you put in, starting with the name of the first material and ending with the second. Additives will have their full name prefixed before the alloy name.
**If you're clever with the material order, you can cram all sorts of things into an alloy and then revert it to a base name. Make a jumpsuit out of starstone but prefix it with slag, no one can tell the difference without the Material analyzer! A very devious yet underused trick.
*Once a material is smelted into an alloy bar, that bar will keep the material's typing and quirks forever regardless of how many reforges it goes through. You could fuse whatever you want into a telecrystal and it would always have its warping properties, you could pump a hundred ultra-dense uqill into fibrilith and it would still be considered a fabric, etc.
** This does not work with additives however, so make sure to apply the additive last!
*Need one alloy for its typing/effect but desire another alloy's stats? Grab as much of the desired alloy as you can find and gradually pump it into the base alloy. The increasing stat average will push the numbers of the final product up to where you want them to be.
**This doesn't work as well if you're doing this wanting the stats of more than one alloy, but some increases are still better than nothing!
**Note that constantly sullying the mixture like this will decrease Value, but if you're not selling it then you don't have to worry about that.
*On the flip-side of things, if you're ''fighting against'' someone rocking some ridiculously sturdy armor, knowing what alloy gives what stats can provide a hint of what method of attack to use; just examine him and look at the alloy name of his armor. For example, uqill has top-notch Toughness, but absolutely no Compressive or Shear strength on its own, so a gun or bomb will drop him as easily as anyone else.
**This is providing of course that he hasn't done the renaming trick as stated above. Be wary!
 
== Evil Blacksmith ==


*Mauxite. Boring, yes, but plain old mauxite is still nice as a starting armor ingredient.
So you're a traitor? I'm sure you've already seen the boons of durable armor, so I have just one word for you: erebite. Erebite ore tends to make a powerful explosion from so much as being ''looked at'' wrong: the slightest impact, be it from smacking, throwing, heating, electrifying or explosion knockback has a chance to make it go off, and the chance increases as its durability decreases. This extends to anything you make out of it or mix with it, so smelting a single erebite bar into a stack of metal gives you ten easy pipe bombs (possibly more if you make the stack into floor tiles!). Pod Armors made of erebite are especially devastating, essentially being a 2x2 bomb with an engine strapped to it that will tear a huge chunk out of the station. Better still is mixing erebite into gloves for '''EXPLOSIVE PUNCHES'''; if you can use it in conjunction with a Heavy Armor that has high explosive protection, the explosions will barely hurt you while your target is totally floored.
*Uqill is ''ridiculously'' dense, offering both superb melee protection and a whopping 15 damage. A slag shovel made of uqill will crack skulls like nobody's business.
*Bohrum doesn't tank melee as well as uqill, but it halves bullet damage and has a pretty impressive explosion resistance of 5, which is ''very'' handy if someone is bombing the station.
*Koshmarite is also an excellent defensive material. This can only be acquired from stuffing miracle matter into a Recycling Unit and hoping the RNG spits out the right material (since miracle matter can literally become ''any'' ore and gem in the game), but your fellow smelters will love you if you can produce it.


And indeed, no crafting system is without a few advanced tricks. Here are some things to know:
...There's just one catch though: erebite can sometimes explode from ''being put in the smelter to begin with''. That's how volatile this shit is. Make something that resist explosions ''before'' handling erebite, or your traitor round could end prematurely. Don't say we didn't warn you.


*When you combine two materials, their stats average out. For example, say you combine bohrum with its Melee Protection of 7 and uqill with its 11; a direct fusion of the two would yield a Melee Protection of 9.
Or, perhaps explosions too crude for you and you want to get scientific with your traitoring. Making a Heavy Armor and Gloves with chemicals that react with each other and then punching yourself will trigger the reaction, which can be pretty devastating if it's something explosive. Even the humble floor tiles become a terror; they replace the floor as well as the hull with the alloy, which can make for fun times if you fill a hallway with them and infuse them with ice or space lube to cause everyone to slip and bang their head, or just make them out of telecrystal for a chance to warp people to a random spot with every step, making the hallway of choice nearly impossible to navigate. The fun never ends!
*Merged materials will take on a mix-and-match name of whatever you put in: it starts with the additive if you used one, then the first material you inserted, then finishes with the second material.
*If you plan to use two or more materials, figure out which ones you want and then gather as much as you can, and then start smelting them into the same bar one after the other. Smelting the exact same materials together does nothing, but smelting different ones constantly like this will gradually increase/decrease the combined alloy bar's stats until they hit their base maximums/minimums. Note that constantly sullying the mixture like this will decrease Value, but if you're not selling it then you don't have to worry about that.
**If you're crafty with the order of the materials, you can eventually revert their name back to a base material while still having the properties of everything you put in. Make a Heavy Armor prefixed with slag but given uqill's stats, no one will be able to tell the difference without the Material analyzer!
*Once a material is smelted into an alloy bar, that bar will keep the material's typing and quirks forever regardless of how many reforges it goes through. You could fuse whatever you want into a telecrystal and it would always have its spastic warping properties, you could pump a hundred uqill into fibrilith and it would still be considered a fabric, something with a Radium additive would always induce radiation, etc.


== Evil Blacksmith ==
OR, maybe you're looking at this section because your assassination target has armored up and is proving to be a huge pain in the ass to take down. Worry not! As a traitor, you have access to Armor-Piercing (AP) rounds for your guns, which fly right past the Bullet Protection stat and do full damage. Then when he's shouting at you wondering why the fuck he's in crit already, you can taunt him about the value of AP rounds, finish him off and steal his armor for yourself!


So you're a traitor? I'm sure you've already seen the boons of durable armor, so I have just one word for you: erebite. Erebite ore tends to make a huge explosion from so much as being ''looked at'' wrong: the slightest impact, be it from smacking/throwing, heating, electrifying or explosion knockback has a chance to make it go off, and the chance increases as its durability decreases. This extends to anything you make out of it or mix with it, so smelting a single erebite bar into a stack of metal essentially gives you ten easy pipe bombs. Pod Armors made of erebite are equally devastating, basically a 2x2 bomb with an engine strapped to it that will tear a huge chunk out of the station. If you can find a way to set them off easily without blowing yourself up in the process, you can as much damage, if not more, than pyromaniac Scientists and Miners. Like with regular material acquisition, erebite is easiest to acquire as a Quartermaster or Miner depending on how the RNG rolls.
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Latest revision as of 00:43, 10 November 2021

FoodPancakes.png This page is about discontinued content.
The following information is not current. It is kept for historical purposes.
For the current version, see Material science.
Old Material Science
Location

OreProcessing7.png

Metallurgist's paradise.

Access

Everybody


Turning raw ores or metal bars into weird, fancy alloys is possible with the help of an arc smelter. The public one (and the main subject of this guide) is located between the engine cold loop room and the cargo bay airlock. The mining department has access to two arc smelters: one near the mineral magnet and another smelting room is tucked away in the derelict mining outpost.

So fucking metal!

The devices scattered around the room are as follows:

Arc Smelter: This giant contraption in the back of the room is where dreams are made. Simply insert a material into the smelter by clicking it with the desired material in your hand, then click the smelter with an empty hand to refine that material into an alloy bar, then click it again to retrieve the bar. Up to two materials can be loaded to make a combination alloy that combines the functionality of both materials (i.e. combining a metal and a crystal will have it be recognized as both metal and crystal). Note that every use of the smelter causes slag to build up inside of it which, if not removed, will decrease the quality of each successive alloy and cause smoke to billow out of the smelter until it's fixed. Remove slag by clicking the smelter with the slag shovel. Most compatible materials are listed here, though you can also use obscure things like the removed slag, gold or even human flesh with a willing donor. Experiment!

Fabrication Unit: The janky-looking thing on the right side of the smelter. This is where you insert your alloy bars to make stuff. Most schematics require either metal alloys, fabrics, rubber, leather or crystals. A single bar can be made to fill all needs.

Material Recombobulator: The computer to the smelter's left, a creative tool for the chemists. Pour a chemical into it and you can then treat the alloy in that chemical, applying its effects (and in the case of certain chems, stat alterations) to the final product; the more you use, the greater the effect, and rarer chemicals tend to have more interesting effects. You'll have to test with lots of chemicals to see what does what! Sadly this is being revamped and doesn't work at the moment, so try not to insert reagents into it that you can't get back for now.

Loom: Accepts fibrilith, cotton and other fabrics. You can also recycle regular jumpsuits and shoes.

Material analyzer: The hand-held devices on the table next to the general manufacturer can scan and tell you all sorts of info about a material such as its resistance to damage, its value, if it has any unique quirks, etc. You can use it on most materials as well as most things made with the smelter, loom, fabricators and workbenches.

General Manufacturer: These are found all over the station, really. As you'd expect from the name they're supposed to be used for producing general objects, but in Ore Processing it's more for material storage so people don't dump a huge mess of materials all over the room. Comes with a couple bars worth of mauxite, pharosium and molitz to get you started.

oh god what are all these numbers

The material analyzer spits out a lot of information about a material when it's scanned.

Not all of these entries may be correct, be warned! If anyone has corrections to make, please do so!

Property Explanation Notes
Value The selling value of the material. Some alloys are more valuable in bar form than they are as their base material.
Radioactivity How much radiation the material puts off. The higher this value is, the more RAD you take from it. Standing on something made of radioactive material or (obviously) wearing it will apply radiation to you.
Electrical conductivity How well electricity passes through the material. Ranges from 0 to 1, with 0 meaning non-conductive and 1 meaning perfectly conductive. You'll usually see conductive materials in wires.
Thermal conductivity How well heat passes through the material. 0 means no heat escapes it, 1 means it loses heat in a heartbeat. Spacesuits have this set to 0.1.
Quality The higher the value, the more the infused chemical will transfer on hit. Meaningless until the material recombobulator is made to work again.
Instability How likely the material is to break, safely or catastrophically, when struck by a regular attack. Erebite is known for being very unstable.
Hardness How much damage the material does if you whack someone with it. Works wonderfully on powerful melee weapons like fire extinguishers and toolboxes.
Toughness How much melee damage is negated by the material when worn, such as from blunt objects and thrown items. This is only if you're struck in the place where the worn material is; body armor alone won't do much if the attacker goes for your face instead.
Permeability How well the material handles most chemicals. The lower the value is, the less likely it is that chems will reach you if splashed on you. Biosuits have this really low.
Tensile strength Resistance to bladed weapons like knives and C-Sabers. The higher this is, the less likely you are to bleed when hit.
Compressive strength Resistance to bullets. The higher the value is, the less damage bullets do, as well as being less likely to get the bullet lodged in you. Armor-Piercing (AP) rounds always ignore this stat, be advised!
Shear strength Resistance to explosions. The higher this is, the less damage you take from explosions, and the less likely the material is to be destroyed
by them.
Flammability Fire resistance. The lower this is, the less BURN you take from fire and heat. Environmental heat can still murder your lungs without internals, however!
Energy How much power the material puts off when used as a fuel or energy source.
Corrosion resistance The higher this value is, the less likely material is to be reduced to goo when it comes in contact with an acid. People like to splash acids onto your headgear.
Reflectivity Resistance to lasers. The higher this is, the less BURN you take from them. Sadly, it doesn't actually bounce lasers off of you. (Probably should though?)
Scattering The chance of the material breaking into pieces of scrap when destroyed. Scraps can be recycled into usable materials using a portable reclaimer.
Transparency How see-through the material is. Useless, but nonetheless neat.
Melting point How high of a temperature a material can take before it burns away. Materials that simply can't burn are given a message stating as such instead of a value.
Superconductive Temp. If the material exceeds this temperature, electricity will pass right through it. Mostly pointless, but it has a niche use in building walls for a safe area from arc flashes, like say if some traitor hotwired the engine.
Permittivity How susceptible a material is to EMPs and other electrical issues. Pods really appreciate a high amount of this due to most electrical attacks shorting out their systems.
Dielectric strength How well the material works as insulation. Mostly used for wires, but clothing with a high value of this will cause electricity to do less damage to you. Insulated gloves have this very high.
Luminosity How much light the material produces. Self-explanatory, but rare.
Unique properties Notes whether or not the material in question has anything special about it that doesn't fit under the other entries. This doesn't appear at all
if there are no specialties to speak of.
These can range from teleporting you randomly to color-shifting and so on. Experiment to see what does what!

That's nice, now what can I make?

The Fabrication Unit have a bunch of neat blueprints in them:

Product Requirements Location Description!
Glass sheet x10 1x Crystal alloy Ore processing
Waste Disposal
Dissatisfied with the flimsy glass that the station uses? Whip up some of your own with your sturdier alloys.
Metal sheet x10 1x Metal alloy Ore processing
Waste Disposal
Make floors, walls, lockers, crates, etc.
Jumpsuit 1x Fabric alloy Ore processing
Waste Disposal
Someone steal your jumpsuit? Whip up a new one laced with whatever materials you want, it can provide surprisingly good defense!
Slag shovel 1x Metal alloy Ore processing
Waste Disposal
Did someone steal the shovel that came with the room? Teach them a lesson by beating them over the head with a newer, stronger one.
Emergency Toolbox 1x Metal alloy Ore processing
Waste Disposal
Comes with a crowbar, a flashlight, a station bounced radio and a fire extinguisher, all forged from the material of the bar used to make the toolbox.
Fire Extinguisher 1x Metal alloy Ore processing
Waste Disposal
A custom made fire extinguisher. Custom made for what? Hell if I know. To explode on use, or to poison who ever picks it up. Use your imagination.
Shoes 1x Fabric alloy Ore processing
Waste Disposal
Not very protective, but now you can pimp your footwear or turn them into chem dispensers.
Gloves 1x Fabric alloy Medbay
Engineering
More useful than you might think, giving gloves a high Damage value improves the power of your punches. Giving them a high Dielectric strength also makes them act like insulated gloves, neat!
Pod Armor 3x Metal alloy
1x Crystal alloy
EVA One of the main reasons to get into smelting: Pod personalizing! Durability, speed and crew capacity depend on the materials used.
Note: The alloy stats used for the Plating part of the armor are the only thing the game checks for in calculations (damage, atmospherics, unique properties, coloring, etc.). The other alloys are only used in construction and nothing else.
Spacesuit 2x Metal alloy
2x Fabric alloy
EVA Useful for making spacesuits that can take a beating from the monsters and radiation that lurks in space.
Gas mask 1x Fabric alloy EVA
Engineering
Turn your internals into makeshift armor.
Mechanical Toolbox 1x Metal alloy EVA Comes with complete set of tools all in the same alloy as used for the toolbox.
Electrical Toolbox 1x Metal alloy Engineering All parts made in the compound of your choice.
Firesuit 1x Fabric alloy Engineering Protects against temperature change and can be tailored to be form of armor.
Heavy Armor 1x Metal alloy
1x Crystal alloy
Security The other main reason to use the smelter: a super-tough exosuit! Become an armored giant that can shrug off all kinds of abuse to anything not aimed directly at your head, carrying innate defense boosts even before factoring in material stats.
Slightly slows you down when you wear it unless you have another kind of speed-boosting effect active. Remember that this is not a spacesuit and will not protect you against the cold of space on its own... unless you can give it a low
Thermal conductivity, of course.
Note: Like the Pod Armor, only the Plating alloy stats are applied in the game's calculations.
Stun Baton 1x Metal alloy Security Traditionally used to stun people, but with the use of a fabricator you can now make a baton infused with coffee to help with your crippling coffee addiction, or you could make a baton out of pure gold to truly show those criminals who's the man.
Handcuffs 1x Metal alloy Security Home made handcuffs can be pretty mean to the person stuck wearing them, depending on what they're made from.
Watering Can 1x Metal alloy Botany Container for water and just about everything else you might want to stuff in there.
Chainsaw 1x Metal alloy
1x Energy source
Botany Used for carving up plants and people. Nastier alloys are nastier to plants and people.
Labcoat 1x Fabric alloy Medbay
Research
Protects against diseases, and can now be tailored to protect against even more stuff.
Gas Tank 1x Metal alloy Medbay Regular gas tank that can now be built to withstand explosions... or cause explosions, and much more.
Beaker Box 1x Crystal alloy Research Box of beakers, all the beakers will be in the material of your choice.
Atmos Canister 1x Metal alloy Research Tired of having your tanks rupture in the Toxins lab from too much pressure? This is for you.
Cutlery set 1x Metal alloy Bar Knife, spoon, fork, the complete works. All in your alloy of choice.
Drinking glass 1x Crystal alloy Bar Drink from a golden cup.
Plate 1x Crystal alloy Bar Make armor-plated plates. Tap them on someone's head.
Rolling pin 1x Metal alloy Bar The chef's tool of choice. Now available in multiple alloys.

Most departments have their own fabricators for other job-specific stuff. Go check out what your department has access to, you might find something you like! You can also add a blueprint to a fabricator to permanently unlock a new item, but you have to find one first.

So where do I get all the stuff I need?

Procuring the right materials can be a bit luck-based. Sometimes the Quartermaster will get special materials from trades, and the Merchants that come by shuttle can also have some goods. In most rounds however you'll be relying on the Miners, whom you should yell at regularly to bring materials to the smelter since they're literally just down the hall from Ore Processing.

As for what materials you actually want, it really depends on what you're making and why. Here are some baselines:

  • Floors, walls, grilles and the like? Make metal sheets out of something with a high resistance to explosions. These can't (normally) be destroyed with melee or bullets, so explosives are the only thing you need to worry about.
  • Heavy Armor? You will want to mash together as many high protective stats as you can. A properly-smelted Heavy Armor is hands-down the most defensively robust piece of wearable gear in the game, and you can't skimp on defense if someone is on a homicidal rampage, whether the rampager is you or someone else.
  • Pod Armor and windows? Stack on protection from explosions and bullets. Protection from melee damage is nigh-pointless for Pods since most of the harmful stuff they deal with is ranged or shouldn't reach them to begin with; just beware of AP rounds. As for the windows, it's not hard for people to find a Screwdriver and Crowbar to displace them with, so firefights and explosions should be your priority.
    • Note that you can produce reinforced alloy glass with regular metal rods. You don't need to go out of your way for exotic metal rods if you don't want to (though it does help).
  • Gloves and Jumpsuits? These will always need at least one piece of fibrilith/fabric (they're counted as the same thing) per construct, so bother Hydroponics/the Head of Personnel/the Miners for some. Human flesh is an acceptable substitute if someone suicided into the smelter.
  • Atmos Tanks? Go for resistance to whacking, exploding and heat: whacking makes it not break from holding too much gas, exploding makes it not be damaged by other exploding canisters, and heat keeps it stable when another canister starts releasing flaming gas. These are all common dangers in the Toxins mixing lab.
  • Slag shovel? Well... let's be honest, the only reasons you'll be making this are if 1) someone steals the original shovel (rare, but it happens), or 2) as a melee weapon. If it's the latter, grab something with a shit-ton of Hardness and go to town.
  • Selling stuff? Your only focus should be on Value.

All of this is, of course, subject to change depending on your objective and motives. You'll have to discover suitable materials for yourself, but after that it's all up to your imagination.

Alright, I got all that. Now how do I become indestructible?

Indeed, no crafting system is without a few advanced tricks. Here are some things to know:

  • When you combine two materials, their stats average out. Let's say one material had a Hardness of 3 and another had 7; if you mixed them, the combined alloy would have a Hardness of 5.
  • Merged materials will take on a mix-and-match name of whatever you put in, starting with the name of the first material and ending with the second. Additives will have their full name prefixed before the alloy name.
    • If you're clever with the material order, you can cram all sorts of things into an alloy and then revert it to a base name. Make a jumpsuit out of starstone but prefix it with slag, no one can tell the difference without the Material analyzer! A very devious yet underused trick.
  • Once a material is smelted into an alloy bar, that bar will keep the material's typing and quirks forever regardless of how many reforges it goes through. You could fuse whatever you want into a telecrystal and it would always have its warping properties, you could pump a hundred ultra-dense uqill into fibrilith and it would still be considered a fabric, etc.
    • This does not work with additives however, so make sure to apply the additive last!
  • Need one alloy for its typing/effect but desire another alloy's stats? Grab as much of the desired alloy as you can find and gradually pump it into the base alloy. The increasing stat average will push the numbers of the final product up to where you want them to be.
    • This doesn't work as well if you're doing this wanting the stats of more than one alloy, but some increases are still better than nothing!
    • Note that constantly sullying the mixture like this will decrease Value, but if you're not selling it then you don't have to worry about that.
  • On the flip-side of things, if you're fighting against someone rocking some ridiculously sturdy armor, knowing what alloy gives what stats can provide a hint of what method of attack to use; just examine him and look at the alloy name of his armor. For example, uqill has top-notch Toughness, but absolutely no Compressive or Shear strength on its own, so a gun or bomb will drop him as easily as anyone else.
    • This is providing of course that he hasn't done the renaming trick as stated above. Be wary!

Evil Blacksmith

So you're a traitor? I'm sure you've already seen the boons of durable armor, so I have just one word for you: erebite. Erebite ore tends to make a powerful explosion from so much as being looked at wrong: the slightest impact, be it from smacking, throwing, heating, electrifying or explosion knockback has a chance to make it go off, and the chance increases as its durability decreases. This extends to anything you make out of it or mix with it, so smelting a single erebite bar into a stack of metal gives you ten easy pipe bombs (possibly more if you make the stack into floor tiles!). Pod Armors made of erebite are especially devastating, essentially being a 2x2 bomb with an engine strapped to it that will tear a huge chunk out of the station. Better still is mixing erebite into gloves for EXPLOSIVE PUNCHES; if you can use it in conjunction with a Heavy Armor that has high explosive protection, the explosions will barely hurt you while your target is totally floored.

...There's just one catch though: erebite can sometimes explode from being put in the smelter to begin with. That's how volatile this shit is. Make something that resist explosions before handling erebite, or your traitor round could end prematurely. Don't say we didn't warn you.

Or, perhaps explosions too crude for you and you want to get scientific with your traitoring. Making a Heavy Armor and Gloves with chemicals that react with each other and then punching yourself will trigger the reaction, which can be pretty devastating if it's something explosive. Even the humble floor tiles become a terror; they replace the floor as well as the hull with the alloy, which can make for fun times if you fill a hallway with them and infuse them with ice or space lube to cause everyone to slip and bang their head, or just make them out of telecrystal for a chance to warp people to a random spot with every step, making the hallway of choice nearly impossible to navigate. The fun never ends!

OR, maybe you're looking at this section because your assassination target has armored up and is proving to be a huge pain in the ass to take down. Worry not! As a traitor, you have access to Armor-Piercing (AP) rounds for your guns, which fly right past the Bullet Protection stat and do full damage. Then when he's shouting at you wondering why the fuck he's in crit already, you can taunt him about the value of AP rounds, finish him off and steal his armor for yourself!


Archive
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