buildcraft combustion engines overheat





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I have an issue with combustion engines. As seen in the pictures below, I have a test setup with 2 combustion engines. I am using gold fluid pipes for the water pumping. When the combustion engines reach about 100 degrees, the water drops to zero and after that, the heat of the engines increases.
Anyone knows what the issue might be?










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  • Your problem is that water disappears when it reaches 100°C? I don't know the mod, but in reality this would mean that it's now gas.

    – Fabian Röling
    Jul 27 '18 at 21:33











  • Lol in reality it would, yea

    – Hendrik Hamming
    Jul 29 '18 at 9:44


















0















I have an issue with combustion engines. As seen in the pictures below, I have a test setup with 2 combustion engines. I am using gold fluid pipes for the water pumping. When the combustion engines reach about 100 degrees, the water drops to zero and after that, the heat of the engines increases.
Anyone knows what the issue might be?










share|improve this question
















bumped to the homepage by Community 9 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
















  • Your problem is that water disappears when it reaches 100°C? I don't know the mod, but in reality this would mean that it's now gas.

    – Fabian Röling
    Jul 27 '18 at 21:33











  • Lol in reality it would, yea

    – Hendrik Hamming
    Jul 29 '18 at 9:44














0












0








0








I have an issue with combustion engines. As seen in the pictures below, I have a test setup with 2 combustion engines. I am using gold fluid pipes for the water pumping. When the combustion engines reach about 100 degrees, the water drops to zero and after that, the heat of the engines increases.
Anyone knows what the issue might be?










share|improve this question
















I have an issue with combustion engines. As seen in the pictures below, I have a test setup with 2 combustion engines. I am using gold fluid pipes for the water pumping. When the combustion engines reach about 100 degrees, the water drops to zero and after that, the heat of the engines increases.
Anyone knows what the issue might be?







minecraft minecraft-mods minecraft-buildcraft






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edited Aug 21 '18 at 18:04









pppery

290210




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asked Jul 26 '18 at 8:26









Hendrik HammingHendrik Hamming

11




11





bumped to the homepage by Community 9 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.







bumped to the homepage by Community 9 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.















  • Your problem is that water disappears when it reaches 100°C? I don't know the mod, but in reality this would mean that it's now gas.

    – Fabian Röling
    Jul 27 '18 at 21:33











  • Lol in reality it would, yea

    – Hendrik Hamming
    Jul 29 '18 at 9:44



















  • Your problem is that water disappears when it reaches 100°C? I don't know the mod, but in reality this would mean that it's now gas.

    – Fabian Röling
    Jul 27 '18 at 21:33











  • Lol in reality it would, yea

    – Hendrik Hamming
    Jul 29 '18 at 9:44

















Your problem is that water disappears when it reaches 100°C? I don't know the mod, but in reality this would mean that it's now gas.

– Fabian Röling
Jul 27 '18 at 21:33





Your problem is that water disappears when it reaches 100°C? I don't know the mod, but in reality this would mean that it's now gas.

– Fabian Röling
Jul 27 '18 at 21:33













Lol in reality it would, yea

– Hendrik Hamming
Jul 29 '18 at 9:44





Lol in reality it would, yea

– Hendrik Hamming
Jul 29 '18 at 9:44










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I think you need to be activley pumping in more water than fuel to compensate on these engines, the gold wont affect that as its not an increase in vulume, try having a second pump systems adding to the water intake, two pipes in on each combustion engine, that might compensate enough.



Then again combustion engines are notorious for being utterly useless due to constant overheating and exploding, I prefer solar






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    I think you need to be activley pumping in more water than fuel to compensate on these engines, the gold wont affect that as its not an increase in vulume, try having a second pump systems adding to the water intake, two pipes in on each combustion engine, that might compensate enough.



    Then again combustion engines are notorious for being utterly useless due to constant overheating and exploding, I prefer solar






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      0














      I think you need to be activley pumping in more water than fuel to compensate on these engines, the gold wont affect that as its not an increase in vulume, try having a second pump systems adding to the water intake, two pipes in on each combustion engine, that might compensate enough.



      Then again combustion engines are notorious for being utterly useless due to constant overheating and exploding, I prefer solar






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        I think you need to be activley pumping in more water than fuel to compensate on these engines, the gold wont affect that as its not an increase in vulume, try having a second pump systems adding to the water intake, two pipes in on each combustion engine, that might compensate enough.



        Then again combustion engines are notorious for being utterly useless due to constant overheating and exploding, I prefer solar






        share|improve this answer













        I think you need to be activley pumping in more water than fuel to compensate on these engines, the gold wont affect that as its not an increase in vulume, try having a second pump systems adding to the water intake, two pipes in on each combustion engine, that might compensate enough.



        Then again combustion engines are notorious for being utterly useless due to constant overheating and exploding, I prefer solar







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        answered Aug 1 '18 at 7:51









        Mike RamplingMike Rampling

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