Difference between revisions of "Sun lamp"
(Math checks out by my working, but its not just the average - it assumes its always consistent, if its more or less during day or night, then the balance changes. Added needed battery storage.) |
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== Version history == | == Version history == | ||
* [[Version/0.17.1546|0.17.1546]] - Now turn themselves off when plants are resting. | * [[Version/0.17.1546|0.17.1546]] - Now turn themselves off when plants are resting. | ||
+ | * [[Version/1.2.2753|1.2.2753]] - Fix: [[Gloomlight]] would prevent a sun lamp from producing "brightly lit" cells within the radius of the Gloomlight. Due to: the glowColor of the Gloomlight not having an explicit alpha of zero. It now correctly ignores the alpha from the xml. | ||
+ | |||
{{nav|furniture|wide}} | {{nav|furniture|wide}} | ||
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[[Category:Furniture]] [[Category:Lamp]] | [[Category:Furniture]] [[Category:Lamp]] | ||
[[Category:Food Production]] | [[Category:Food Production]] |
Revision as of 05:58, 20 November 2023
Sun lamp
An industrial lamp which lights an area brightly enough to grow crops, but consumes a huge amount of power. Automatically turns itself off at night.
Base Stats
- Mass
- 4.5 kg
- HP
- 50
- Flammability
- 100%
- Path Cost
- 14 (48%)
Building
- Size
- 1 × 1
- Minifiable
- True
- Placeable
- True
- Passability
- pass through only
- Cover Effectiveness
- 20%
- Blocks Wind
- True
- Terrain Affordance
- Light
- Power
- -2900 W
- Light Radius
- 11.72
- Heat Per Second
- 3
Creation
- Required Research
- Electricity
- Work To Make
- 330 ticks (5.5 secs)
- Destroy yield
- nothing
- thingCategories
- BuildingsFurniture
Sun lamps provide artificial light in the absence of sunlight, such as an indoor growing zone.
Acquisition
It is constructed with 40 Steel in 330 ticks (5.5 secs) after Electricity has been researched.
Summary
A sun lamp consumes 2900 W of power from 06:00 to 19:12, the period where plants can grow. While online, it provides 100% light within a 5-tile radius. This allows crops like rice plant to grow in a roofed room. As the natural sun doesn't always provide 100% light at day, a sun lamp causes plants to grow somewhat faster. They also provide at least 30% light in a 13-tile radius, which is enough to prevent penalties for being in darkness.
Due to RimWorld's temperature mechanics, an enclosed room with a mostly complete roof is required to actually heat or cool an area. Lamps themselves give a marginal amount of heat, 3 heat per second.
Rain or snow on a powered sun lamp will cause short circuits and fires. A roof will prevent this.
Analysis
A sun lamp's main purpose is to create growing zones indoors, often called greenhouses. This allows plants to grow in the winter, when used with a heater. In extremely hot biomes, you might need coolers to grow during in the summer. Even in an "year-round" growing season, unpredictable events such as toxic fallout and volcanic winters can disrupt plant growth. Double-width walls provide more insulation against temperature changes, and potentially save on heater/cooler costs.
Solar flares will cut the power, so prepare a shelf with emergency wood to build campfires to keep the room temperature above -10 °C (14 °F) (below which most plants will rapidly die).
As they cannot be grown under roofs, trees such as pine, birch, saguaro or cocoa trees may not be grown in completely closed greenhouses. They may only be grown in greenhouses with roofs open in a grid pattern, and those leak a lot of temperature-controlled air. As these roofs will let in sufficient natural sunlight in most biomes, there is no need to place a sun lamp inside tree greenhouses.
Power
If you have biofuel refineries available, you can use food produced by hydroponics to fuel chemfuel generators to help power the greenhouse array. This is so efficient that it violates thermodynamics, and leaves you with spare food for your colonists as well.
As sun lamps turn off at night, they consume an average of 1595 W⋅Days. Batteries can be used to average out power usage. However, batteries only take in energy at a 50% rate, effectively meaning double the power is required at night, for a required power generation of 2069 W⋅Days assuming 100% consistent power generation and a single battery with a passive loss of -5W⋅Days per day. As this only requires 463.1 W⋅Days of storage and a battery holds 600 W⋅Days, fewer batteries and infinitesimally less generation is needed when multiple sun lamps are supported.
Otherwise, 2[Verify/Detail] solar generators are roughly enough to power a single sun lamp in equatorial regions, not counting any hydroponics basins.
Hydroponics
You can grow crops indoors with or without hydroponics basins. It is more cost effective to grow on soil, assuming you have soil available.
- The 24 hydroponics basins would cost 2400 Steel, 24 Components for a total of 2.8 sun lamp's worth of growth. This does not count the extra 1680 W of power required for those basins.
- You could instead make and power 2 more sun lamps. 4 solar generators are enough to power those lamps, and would only cost 400 Steel, 12 Components. Even when considering batteries, heaters, and the 80 for sun lamps themselves, making more sun lamps is more efficient than building hydroponics for 1.
If your only goal is to grow crops during the winter, then placing multiple sun lamps without hydroponics is more resource efficient than using hydroponics. However, the lamps would end up taking up more space. Therefore, hydroponics are best used when growing space is limited, like inside a mountain or in an ice sheet.
In the late game, hydroponics have a few advantages. Due to their reduced space, it takes less travel time, which makes work more efficient and defense easier. They take up less power per tile, too. When you have access to deep drills and fabrication, you can easily afford the steel and component cost.
Version history
- 0.17.1546 - Now turn themselves off when plants are resting.
- 1.2.2753 - Fix: Gloomlight would prevent a sun lamp from producing "brightly lit" cells within the radius of the Gloomlight. Due to: the glowColor of the Gloomlight not having an explicit alpha of zero. It now correctly ignores the alpha from the xml.