![]() So, if your Accumulator output (A or P, in this case) is than 0. Your decider is reading your % of power from the accumulator. I suppose it's important to note that the accumulator's signal given off is a percentage of full power, not a straight gigawatt signal.Īs for programming things, it's fairly simple. (Ignore the other decider and light, those are for personal use and are completely unnecessary.) The output of the decider goes to the input of the power switch and that's what sets your threshold. The accumulator signal goes into the input of the decider so that you can set whatever number (threshold) you want the steam engines to start working again. Blue is my accumulator, I have it set to putting out signal P, but default signal is A (the actual accumulator i use is somewhere else in my base attached to this system, i set up this accumulator for demonstration). The power switch is what connects/disconnects things. My steam power comes in down the Yellow arrow into a power switch (make sure it's on the correct side). ![]() SteamPowerCutoff.png (647.78 KiB) Viewed 12717 times
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