Hello everyone, I’m working on building myself a better mining ship and it’s occurred to me that I predominantly use only two mining methods: Fixed drills or “simple” drilling arms that use only pistons and rotors to extend forward and make a bar of drills drill the area of a field via rotation.
I’m know people make large-grid mining ships and I’ve seen a few that are amazing… and suffered a good bit trying to replicate a design I can’t find anymore. But, I don’t know much about how to effectively go about mining with large drills…
When I was trying to make a large-grid drill wheel I was told that builds usually focus on making a small number of drills do more drilling and my design was horribly inefficient (and it was, in addition to being a PITA to assemble). So, are there any good resources on how to make a drilling-arm that’ll cover a broad area using a small number of drills?
It was pretty stable on a landing-gear’d platform so my intention is to make a ship that lands on the surface adjacent to intended mining spots and then drills down into the ore.
The timing was very important though, took a fair few reloads to get the timing down just right to mitigate unwanted collisions and missed voxel material which would damage the system. But once that’s done it’s actually pretty smooth.
The design I mentioned in the main post was a Klangy monstrosity though, I had made a wheel out of like ~16 drills contorted into a wheel shape using hinges. I then used merge-blocks to condense the wheel into being ~4 subgrids. It worked OK just it was a nightmare to assemble and couldn’t handle impacts very well so the user would have to be exceptionally careful when using it.