Significantly updates the Engineering guidebook (more explicitly the Atmos section) to have a lot more relevant and useful information. Right now engineering has been getting update after update with no real change to the relevant guidebook entry. This has lead to a lot of out of date information and bad practices being prevalent in the guidebook, something that pains me to read.
24 lines
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24 lines
1.0 KiB
XML
<Document>
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# Gas Condensing
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Gas condensers take gasses and condense them into their liquid (reagent) forms.
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<Box>
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<GuideEntityEmbed Entity="BaseGasCondenser"/>
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</Box>
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For example, water vapor can be condensed into liquid water, oxygen into liquid oxygen, and so on.
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It has a [textlink="pipenet" link="PipeNetworks"] connection to input gas, and an internal tank to store the condensed liquid.
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A condensor will stop condensing gas if the tank is full.
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You can take liquid out of the condenser by interacting with it using any empty container.
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Gas condensors can take multiple gasses as input, and will condense them into their liquid forms.
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For example, if you input a mixture of oxygen and nitrogen, you will get liquid oxygen and liquid nitrogen in the output tank.
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Because [textlink="Chemistry" link="Chemist"] works with limited reagents in liquid form, they will highly appreciate the work of a skilled atmospherics technician who can provide them with the reagents they need.
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</Document>
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