Hey so i made some t flip-flops and XNOR gates for doors and i noticed that when the output is wired to a piston and the button is pushed the piston extends as it should. but when the power goes off the piston fails to retract. the only way to retract is after the power is off is to update the piston. i found that hooking up another piston to the side to update the other piston with a delay coming from the input will fix this issue.
Let me know if u experience the same issue and if you are all u have to do is find a way to update the piston after the power goes off, usually with another piston wired around the logic gate that leads directly to the one that needs updating.
I really hope this gets fixed soon because if it doesnt then logic gates are goin to get more complex .
Tell me what u think on this subjectand yes i just realized i spelled logic wrong in the title ugh. dang it
i found to fix you jus need to run a line of redstone from the input button around to a piston facing the piston that needs updating. throw a few repeaters on full delay so the piston extends to update the other one after the power goes off. its really annoying cuz u have to make the circuit bigger. oh well. hope its fixed soon
you could try powering a block next to the piston instead of the piston itself or vice versa or even an inverter after the piston to drain the power from the piston, ive had it where the block holds the charge even though theres a piston adjoined to it and the power is off
yea it still hapens even if the output is going into a block next to the piston
is the input line still powered or just the piston extended when you turn off the power ?
after i hit the input button on it and the power goes off the piston stays extended even though the redstone leading to it is off
btw: doors and other things close after the power goes off so u can split the output lead one to a piston and one to the door and u can see the difference
Have you tried clearing your cache and re-updating? Or removing the problem items/blocks, saving, reloading, and replacing them? Or, if you have blocks going over the pistons with an active line, that will make the pistons act as a block update detector. That shouldn't keep them from extending or retracting though.
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Let me know if u experience the same issue and if you are all u have to do is find a way to update the piston after the power goes off, usually with another piston wired around the logic gate that leads directly to the one that needs updating.
I really hope this gets fixed soon because if it doesnt then logic gates are goin to get more complex .
Tell me what u think on this subjectand yes i just realized i spelled logic wrong in the title ugh. dang it
yea it still hapens even if the output is going into a block next to the piston
after i hit the input button on it and the power goes off the piston stays extended even though the redstone leading to it is off
btw: doors and other things close after the power goes off so u can split the output lead one to a piston and one to the door and u can see the difference
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