Minecart

Minecarts are rideable entities placed on rails that can be used to carry items, mobs, and the Player. They are used as a form of transportation to cover long distances, since they are much faster than walking. Additionally, they are used for recreation - intricate roller coasters have been created through clever track placement and design.

Minecarts are placed in the same manner as other blocks; however, they can only be created on top of minecart tracks. Once placed, they may be derailed by pushing them off of the end of the track.

Crafting
Minecarts are not stackable.

Once placed, minecarts can be hit, which reverts them back to an item. This can be done even while they are being ridden. Swords and picks can do this in one hit with no decrease in durablity, where as one arrow will do the same, although losing the arrows.

History
When Minecarts were first released, they had a different inventory icon.

Their only purpose was to store things in. The more things you would put in the higher the "Dirt Level" would rise.

Since the Beta 1.5 update, minecarts break faster with fists. C418 posted a sound showing the sound that minecarts have since the Beta 1.9 Pre-releases. As of Beta 1.8 if you punch a minecart when descending from a jump, it will show the critical hit animation. This also happens if you punch the cart while still in it.

Basic Minecart Usage


Minecarts can be ridden by right-clicking them. Once inside, the player cannot move, so an external impulse (a Powered Minecart, Powered Rail, or other player) is required to set the cart in motion. It is possible to push the minecart yourself and then jump in.

Players can exit the minecart by right clicking it, however if there is only one block of headroom above the cart the player will take half a heart of suffocation damage as his head will be temporarily through the ceiling. It is possible to interact with the environment while riding a cart, such as shooting a bow at enemies or laying down track in front of the minecart while it is moving.

After rolling off of the end of a track, a minecart can be pushed around on open blocks. If a minecart is pushed onto or falls onto tracks, it will "snap" to those tracks. As of Beta 1.6, a minecart will transfer any fall damage it suffers onto its rider. The cart will not be destroyed upon impact.

A minecart will stop when it encounters a dropped item, and will not travel past it. If either passive or aggressive mob is hit or pushed into a rideable minecart, the minecart will stop and the mob will ride it. They will escape if the player right clicks to ride it themselves (pushing out the animal or mob) or if the cart is destroyed. They may also exit after a while.

Speed
Minecarts have a predefined speed limit of 8 m/s per axis of travel. undefined This means that a minecart traveling on two axes will travel faster; for example, a sufficiently boosted minecart traveling diagonally will move at 8 m/s on the x axis and 8 m/s on the z axis, resulting in an actual speed of 11.314 m/s. In this sense, diagonal cart physics violate taxicab geometry. This also applies to carts moving downhill (and uphill, if they have been properly boosted)

Boosting
Beta 1.5 introduced Powered Rails, which can boost or stop the player. Maximum momentum can be attained immediately by using a double-stacked minecart in Minecraft 1.1 as shown here

Loss of speed
One unit of kinetic energy could be defined as the energy gained by a cart going down a one block slope, and lost by a cart when it goes up a one block slope. If a 45 degree downward slope is connected directly into an upward slope, an initial height of 60 blocks will result in a final height of 40 blocks, a loss of 20 units of potential energy. But if 20 sections of flat track are inserted between the slopes, the final height will be 35. This implies that one unit of energy is lost for every 4 sections of horizontal track traveled with an initial stored energy of between 60 and 40. At much lower speeds, much less energy is lost, implying that the energy lost is a percentage of the cart's current energy. The above gives about 0.5% energy loss per section of track. One implication of this is that more energy lost when the cart has more energy, so a gradual slope should allow you to travel much farther distances than a steep slope followed by a long flat section. (This is different from real-life physics, where friction does not increase with velocity. However, it may be an attempt to mirror air resistance, which is proportional to velocity.).

Anything in the way of the minecart will take it to a dead stop, including: blocks, items, and mobs. Once a minecart has left the track, it will rapidly decelerate within one or two squares. It is possible to have a sufficiently boosted minecart "skip" over one square without a track, then rejoin the track at reduced energy later. When a mob touches a minecart they affect it in the same way a player would, i.e. mobs that move up against a still cart will set it in motion. When a minecart hits a mob, the mob will ride it.

If a minecart leaves your rendering distance it will lose all energy until it re-enters the rendering distance. Also, all minecarts will lose all energy when you leave the game and will render at the same point when you left. This could lead to stalling minecart loop boosters.

Merged minecarts
Merged minecarts are two or more minecarts merged together. This can be done in various ways, one of which is putting a minecart on a 1-piece slope-track and letting another minecart fall on top of it. When minecarts are merged the player can still ride them. What makes them useful, however, is their odd way of losing speed. When coming off a track, merged minecarts initially lose their speed to around walking speed. But after first contact, they won't lose their speed anymore.

This way they can be used to cross certain distances when the player's only goal is to not actively walk towards his goal / target. Or when the player doesn't have enough resources to cover the complete distance, this measure can be considered. Note: for this concept to work, at least 3 minecarts will have to be merged.

Unoccupied Carts, Incline and a boost
This table shows the distance traveled by an unoccupied minecart on an incline, with a boost (or no boost). The most efficient way is to use only 1 boost at the bottom of the incline on the flat surface. Using 2 will increase by about 20% or 1.5m. All distance trends based on the height seem to be logarithmic. The carts started from rest, on an incline (at Height).

Detecting Minecarts
The Detector Rail is a switch introduced in Beta 1.5 and activated by minecarts. It generates a Redstone charge when a minecart is on the rail.

Prior to Beta 1.5, carts were detected by using Pressure Plates in line with cart tracks. This had the often undesirable effect of dramatically slowing or even stopping the minecart, which limited the use of this design mostly to boosters.

Minecarts can also be detected when their corners run over Pressure Plates as they go around a curved track. The effect is similar to the Detector Rail, but can only occur at curves.

Collision
Minecarts seem to have about the same size as a block; 1x1. Because of this, a sign or door will prevent it from falling down a 1x1 hole. This can be utilized to make minecart dispensers, by stacking carts on top of each other and dispensing them with the help of a booster. A single cart dispenser using a door can also be made by using a sign to block the cart from falling off the door.

Additionally, you can transport carts along 1 block wide water streams without the minecarts falling by placing signs underneath. By alternating the signs, items can still fall through. Because streams carry minecarts at a very slow rate, a trap can be made where anyone sitting in a cart will be suffocated in a block directly above the stream, and their items can be collected below.

Carts on minecart tracks will also ignore collision in certain situations. A cart traveling downhill or on a curve with a block placed in front of it will go through the block. If it is going fast enough, it can skip through one block and reattach to track on the other side, at significantly reduced speed.

A player riding in a minecart will not collide with or suffocate in any transparent blocks, including glass, half steps, and leaves.

Special Minecarts
There are currently two types of special minecarts:
 * Powered Minecart - A self-propelled minecart that is powered by coal.
 * Storage Minecart - A minecart that can store items like a standard chest.

Minecart Trains


After Seecret Friday Update 7, creating Minecart trains became a much simpler solution to transporting goods. To create a train, start with a fairly short length of straight track with an open ending on one side. Put a Powered Minecart on the side nearest the open end, and then add Storage Minecarts or ridable Minecarts along the rest of the track. Then, turn on your Powered Minecart. It will push the other Minecarts as if it were a Minecart Train. Placing an additional Powered Minecart on the other end will allow you to make a two-way train, as minecarts currently only push other carts, not pull.

Bugs

 * In many servers the use of a mine cart is extremely laggy. You may find when riding that the cart stops and starts suddenly and may become hard to control.
 * While in a minecart and holding a map, if the player opens their inventory the players left hand will be slightly glitched into appearing above the map. This also makes the right hand slightly toward the center of the screen when holding nothing. [1.2.4]
 * A glitch can be achieved while pushing the minecart on a rail below a block (dirt, stone, etc.) with one side blocked, and if you sit in it, you won't be able to move, destroy the mine cart, or get out. You will take damage as you would under water if you were out of breath until you die and respawn (Minecraft 1.1).
 * Detonating TNT in close proximity to a minecart, even when doing so with the TNT submerged in water (such as a cannon), will often cause the minecart to disintegrate into numerous dropped minecarts.
 * If there is a saddled pig in a minecart in a two block high space and you get on it you will slowly suffocate to death and be able to see under the ground
 * Riding a saddled pig in a minecart creates a self propelling booster.
 * Since Beta 1.5, water will not put out flaming minecarts.
 * Since Beta 1.7.3, going around a corner turning left in a 1-block-wide tunnel will cause suffocation damage. This can occur multiple times if going at a slow speed.
 * If a minecart is pushed onto a trapdoor with a track directly beneath it, the cart will glitch through the trapdoor and onto the rail.
 * When you click on a bed in a minecart you go to sleep and then wake up in your minecart.
 * Since Beta 1.8, it is possible to ride in Minecart through a wall in creative.
 * Since Beta 1.8.1, in Creative mode you can get in a minecart at ridiculous distances, even through a wall, since the player had an infinite reach distance in Beta 1.8 before Beta 1.9 Pre-releases.
 * You can right-click into a minecart while falling and you will take no falling damage, however all accumulated falling damage will be taken when you exit. This can be fixed by logging out then back in while in the minecart.
 * A long fall into water whilst riding in a minecart will result in damage. Water does not cushion the fall like it does for normal falling.
 * In the release version, minecarts sitting on any block except for a rail will periodically fall through that block in SMP.
 * If the player is playing on superflat it is possible to glitch the minecart in such a way as to having an unstoppable minecart. This is done by getting several minecarts with mobs inside them merged on the track then placing water which gives them a push they will then move in one direction until stopped by a village or the player.
 * Video showing some interesting minecart bugs. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=brrhX9xQ3x0&feature=plcp&context=C408e09dVDvjVQa1PpcFPZmqzfFaZ6PW36laakneAkYNJvYJ3orC8=

Trivia

 * Endermen cannot teleport out of minecarts.
 * Minecarts appear to float above the track, as their model has no wheels.
 * Pigs can be ridden while in Minecarts, although a saddle is needed. This gives you a self-propelling minecart. Player_riding_pig_riding_minecart_pushed_by_powered_minecart.png pig in a minecart rebounding off a powered minecart.]]
 * Small slimes may be used to power a minecart by hitting it from behind. This strategy works fairly well, and can be used to power long minecart trains.
 * You can bump a medium slime in a minecart, and it can't attack you. However, a large slime can.
 * The large slime will completely cover a minecart.
 * A medium slime in a minecart has a small but powerful "Force Field" around it where you get pushed away, but not hurt.
 * Slimes in minecarts will divide if punched to death. This makes dividing slimes easy, as they can't move.
 * Minecarts automatically stored items until the storage minecart was put into the game.
 * Dropped items and Skeleton arrows, if left on a track, will stop a minecart as if they were walls.
 * Tamed wolves will follow you when you are in a Minecart.
 * If you view your inventory while riding in a Minecart you will appear sitting down in mid-air.
 * The texture file, cart.png, features a large 'leather like' panel that used to be used as the bottom of the minecart when it contained items, back when minecarts were used to store items. It is now unused, however. MinecartStack.png
 * Minecarts can be set on fire, but the mob or player inside the minecart will not catch fire from a minecart. (Pictured)
 * Spiders can get "caught" in a minecart. On certain times of the day they can hurt you, but not always. A powered minecart cannot push the spider while the player and powered rails can. The spider cannot escape but it can look around.
 * The minecart can drive underwater if launched by rail and some air supplies underwater.
 * Spider Jockeys can propel themselves on flat surfaces and chase you.
 * Minecarts can be stacked onto each other.