Talk:Tutorials/Quarry


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I dont think the math is right on this page. 20X20 = 400 blocks. Asuming a sea level quarry at 61 blocks on average to bedrock, it would yeild 24400 blocks, thats only 381.25 stacks of block in total. no were near the "1500 stacks of cobblestone", not to mention that the ore provided starts reaching the 60-70% efficency range. seems like this could get someone new to waste alot of time over this false info.

math

20x20=400

400x61= volume of 24400 blocks

24400 blocks / 64 = 381.25 stacks of blocks total in the example given in the page.


 * I see the number's changed now, but I think the stacks of coal, iron, diamond etc. are still to big.

150+50+20+5+1 = 226. That would mean more than half the blocks are coal or 'better'. I don't think this is right. Mysticyx
 * It's not at all. The numbers are absolutely ludicrous. So I created a 20x30 quarry myself to get actual numbers. It yielded about 6 stacks of coal, 1-2 stacks of iron, a dozen or so gold ores, 17 diamonds, 1 stack of obsidian, and 5-6 stacks of redstone. My numbers don't even come up to a 1/20th for the stated coal, iron and gold, and my quarry was 1.5 times bigger. Quarry's are extremely inefficient and are really only good for gathering large quantities of cobblestone. --SkyKoli 23:32, 9 December 2010 (CST)

In my experience with a 32x28 quarry 1/2 of the way to bedrock and I had only collected around 14000 blocks which comes out about 216 stacks. that includes dirt and cobble stone, there was about 2 stacks of coal and 1 stack of iron. --ReubenHung 23:19, 10 December 2010 (UTC)