Talk:Tutorials/TNT cannons/Archive 1

This is an English Wiki So pls let it AMMUNITION not MUNITION

-Munition - Materials used in war, especially weapons and ammunition.

-Ammunition - A supply or quantity of bullets and shells.

-Those are two completely separate words and should not be interchanged.

?Maximum Delay Increases Distance?

When using TNT as the projectile, I've noticed it consistently travels further when the projectile TNT was activated the moment the booster detonates. Specifically a delay of 10 repeaters set to 4. Kmwillia 12:52, 25 April 2011 (UTC)

00:20, 14 June 2012 (UTC)00:20, 14 June 2012 (UTC)~

Yes, R4.10 is the maximum delay, And achieves the maximum Range for a cannon without changing anything else.

This article is obsolete
As of the latest updates it is not possible to make TNT Cannons (at least not like this). So should this article mark as obsolete? --The mr Zalli from Finland 22:16, 7 October 2011 (UTC)


 * I agree, this page is rather outdated. It needs a rewrite. I don't agree, however, that cannons can't be made "like this" anymore (a variety of methods are covered here; most aren't my first choice, but whatevs), as they can indeed. [|Cactus Master] 02:50, 22 November 2011 (UTC)


 * Wrong! each of these cannons work, i tried it myself!

76.27.210.111 21:57, 28 May 2012 (UTC)

--ArkEneru, cannon expert
 * That is very wrong. Many of these things are true, especially the part about mounting blocks and condensation. The example cannon is outdated as of 1.1, but still functions as a short range anti-infantry cannon. Edit: I do see your point though in terms of rewrite. Edit 2: Working on it!

ArkEneru 01:27, 14 June 2012 (UTC)

Cannon Range Equation
Ok, so before I give you the numbers, let me first explain how I went about this. I used my Ramses Cannon to test this (link provided so you can see the details of the platform). I tested range at elevations of .5 blocks, 1 block, and 1.5 blocks, as I considered these the practical range of elevations. I used charges from 1-7 tnt for each elevation. I recorded the distance for each shot from each pairing of elevation and charge size. I then took that data and using magic created the following equation. Do remember that it isn't perfect, as it assumes that your target is on the same plane as your cannon. I'm working on altering the equation to account for changes in this.

EQUATION

f(x, w) = 13.0539 + cos(0.35123932 - x)/(32.091557 - 15.533575/cos(18.448326*w - x) - 47.684593*x) + 11.635796*w*cos(0.35123932 - x) - 3.8064015*x*cos(18.448326*w - x) - 12.089317*cos(18.448326*w - x) - 11.635796*x

STATISTICS:

r^2: 0.997904

Maximum error: 3.374008

Minimum error: 3.8147^-6

Reply: You have not indicated the repeater lengths, which is another varible. As someone has said up there, the delay length matters very much. --ArkEneru

This is more for testing purposes than actual use in combat (my server's battles are too fast for such nonsense), as unless you've got an application built to do so (I made a quick C++ for it), plugging in the numbers is a bit tedious. I feel like a better equation could potentially be derived if more data is used, but I'm pressed for time. If someone would want to help me make a better equation, I suggest using the Ramses in a no-lag environment and measuring elevations of 0, 2, 2.5, and 3 with 1-7 tnt charges. I do, however, not see the point in ever actually equipping a cannon with elevations at the extremes; they are useful in only a handful of situations in battle (and can be accomplished by specialized equipment much easier). Please tell me what you think. My goal for the equation is to be included on the actual page after validation and such by all necessary parties. Thanks for reading.

How the acceleration of gravity (7.5M/S/S) is calculated??
The article referred that "TNT falls at a constant acceleration of 7.5 m/s/s, an important number for predicting the range and drop of the shot"

I have some questions about this. First, how the Measure of "meter" in this blocky game is defined? Dose the author means "blocks"?? Second, what is more important, I’ve developed a experiment to measure the acceleration of gravity in the game(which means I do not use any tools that out side the game) and I've got some statistics which indicate that the sand will get into a constant speed of 2blocks/tic when falls about 10 blocks away. But unfortunately, the experiment is not accurate enough to calculate the actual number of this acceleration.

I'm here to ask if anyone has a method to get the accurate number of the acceleration of gravit? If so, please contact me at peterdengjr@gmail.com –Preceding unsigned comment was added by Woshizhu99 (Talk&#124;Contribs) 13:43, 30 April 2012‎. Please sign your posts with


 * Your measurement is close; the actual acceleration and maximum speed are at Entity (pulled from decompiled source code). Looks like the 7.5 m/s/s figure was added by an anonymous user - I'll remove it, as it's quite wrong. -- Orthotope 04:55, 1 May 2012 (UTC)

Names
I like ArkEneru's TNT page, it has some very useful information, but I need some help. I do not completely understand the naming process. It is very confusing. Can somebody please expand on ArkEneru's explanation for to me. That would be very helpful.

An example of two cannon names are ArkEneru's 119.3R4.10M6 Ares and 112.0MM3 Ironwall Anti-Infantry cannon.

CommanderLOL 20:22, 13 June 2012 (UTC)CommanderLOL

00:14, 14 June 2012 (UTC)ArkEneru Hey! Saw your comment, maybe this can help:

Charge= TNT used to fire a projectile Shot= said projectile, usually TNT Vertical row of TNT= Well, harder to explain. Say, in the example cannon, it has 1. If it had another row of TNT above that row, it would be 2, etc

119.3R4.10M6 Ares

119.3 = 1 row of vertical TNT (the same as the one button medium range cannon), 1 shot, 9 charge, 3 condensation charge. R4.10 = 10 repeaters each with the full setting of delay. M6 = The mounting block code is 6, which means fence post and pressure plate. Ares = Nickname

112.0MM3 Anti-Infantry Ironwall

112.0 = 1 vertical row of TNT, 1 shot, 2 charge, no condensation charge M = manual, no repeaters or other form of delay ( such as minecarts, dispensers (heh)) M3 = Mounting block code for Half block. Anti-Infantry = Descripition of use, not mandatory. Ironwall = Nickname

Hopes that helps! If it dosent, maybe you could post a Descripition of your cannon, and I could show you how to name it.

--Ark

Semi-Automatic versus Automatic delay
Maybe this is not common knowledge, but just because a cannon has one button to activate all the redstone does not make it semi-automatic. The term for that is called automatic delay. Ive made a few semi automatic and automatic designs, and those are called automatic because they actually reload the TNT immediately after each shot. In terms of firing/reloading, the tiers go like this:

Hope that helps you guys understand!
 * Manual: Must activate charge and shot sepreatly and manually, eg no delay, must reload TNT after every shot manually.
 * Automatic delay: Charge and shot are activated automatically, eg delay of some sort, must reload TNT after every shot manually.
 * Semi-Automatic: Charge and shot are activated automatically, TNT is reloaded after every shot, must press button to fire shot after every shot (ooooh so much work!)
 * Fully automatic: Charge and shot are activated automatically, TNT is reloaded after every shot, once you press the button, it keeps firing until you press the button again.

--Ark ArkEneru 00:48, 14 June 2012 (UTC)

Rewite
As of right now (as I wright this post) The article has been mostly re-written by yours truly to be updated with the current Minecraft version and the current level of cannon science. There are still a few things that haven't been re-written, such as the mounting block descriptions, but it's happening. I will update this post according to how close it is to being finished. Also, if you have any questions, post them as replies here. I'll try to get back to you ASAP.

--Ark

ArkEneru 01:34, 14 June 2012 (UTC)