I watched this show about energy consumption, and they mentioned Nano-Tubes. They explained that they are able to be made from plastic bags, they also conduct way better and have an internal storage. They are made in a plastic reactor (replicate this with scrap) and it turns in to charbon nano-tubes. They are also 5 times less susceptable to energy loss. They are wires/cables (Extremely thin)
Nano-Tubes
- Industry Buddy11
- Closed
-
-
As far as I know, we already have nanotech, its the carbon plate and stuff but a crafting recipe to convert it to nanotube is good
-
Thank you for acknowledging my first post.
-
Three words: Glass Fiber Cables
I know they are not as cool as "plastic fiber nano tubes", but if we had a cable with low energy loss made from scrap, it would be OP.
For completely lossless cables, check greg tech superconductor. I am NOT going to talk about the cost
-
I know it's OP, but the machine used to make them should be very expensive, another idea is to make sure that the GUI can't be opened when it's running.
-
...
-
As far as I know, we already have nanotech, its the carbon plate and stuff but a crafting recipe to convert it to nanotube is good
I know what you think about Greg tech, but it makes sense(for the most part) just not always cheap. Also, got any better way to evade Greg tech?
-
I know what you think about Greg tech, but it makes sense(for the most part) just not always cheap. Also, got any better way to evade Greg tech?
You expect a forum which at least 1/2 of its active members use GregTech to reply to the second part?
-
I know, I like Greg tech myself, but you also have to tolerate everybody