Velocity Remover

  • Spektyte
    13th Oct 2011 Member 0 Permalink
    Velocity Remover, or [GLUE]

    I would've just typed Glue as the topic, but I figured that seeing as you guys already rejected a form of glue that creates moving solids, you'd just spam this thread with "REED TEH WIKI@@#@!!!!!21!eleven!!" before even realizing that it's a completely different element.

    Glue is a very, very viscous liquid that will very slowly spread out across any surface it is allowed to. If a particle (powder) comes into contact with it, its X and Y velocities are reduced immediately to zero. If it is possible it should also reduce the velocities of STKM to zero, but I'm not sure if it is, seeing as the actual STKM particle is a few pixels off the surface. If it is drawn facing downwards, it will slowly drip downwards, and if any particles are drawn underneath it, they too will slowly fall.

    If GLUE comes into contact with water or soap, it is "washed" away and dissolves. Acid will dissolve it, but it is not flammable.

    GLUE has little to no effect on gasses or other liquids.

    GLUE will act similar to CLST, changing state with temperature but not creating a new element. Around 1000ÂșC it will solidify and attach to any particles it is in contact with. Seeing as water destroys GLUE, this effect is irreversible.

    For uses, they're pretty straight forward. It would act as the title describes, as it would reduce the velocity of particles to zero, and act as a trap, so to say, for particles, and essentially be and adhesive to stop particles colliding on non-vertical lines.
  • cctvdude99
    13th Oct 2011 Member 0 Permalink

    Spektyte:

    For uses, they're pretty straight forward. It would act as the title describes, as it would reduce the velocity of particles to zero, and act as a trap, so to say, for particles.


    That is not a use. That is what it does.

    We want uses. >:I
  • Spektyte
    13th Oct 2011 Member 0 Permalink
    Well, its use is what it does. It's a pretty straight forward, unique element. i guess you could use it to vertically suspend particles, but i guess that wouldn't work to well even its state of matter. Maybe if when you heat it, it changes state of matter without a new element, similar to CLST.
  • MasterMind555
    13th Oct 2011 Member 0 Permalink
    @Spektyte (View Post)
    OMG I've just found your glue element in TPT! It's called a solid! Whenever a particle touches the solid, his x and y velocity automaticly go down to zero! The devs probably worked very hard on that!
    </ sarcasm >

    Ok maybe it doesn't trap them, but still no real uses...
  • Spektyte
    13th Oct 2011 Member 0 Permalink
    Oh, sorry for wasting your time :( .Did they add the part where horizontal solids stop particles, or where they act as an adhesive to particles drawn adjacent to "ceilings", so to say, in the new beta? I haven't gotten around to downloading it yet...
  • Cave_Johnson
    13th Oct 2011 Member 0 Permalink
    Very NICE PENGUINS
  • Catelite
    13th Oct 2011 Former Staff 0 Permalink
    Glue behavior is definitely possible. This is kinda how CLST works when cooled down.
  • Spektyte
    13th Oct 2011 Member 0 Permalink
    It is? Excellent. But what is your opinion on the suggestion?