Recently I decided to try building the Jeb Door with the intention of trying to make a Fallout type vault at some point, but I ran into an unusual problem.
The structures with yellow circles around them are the Jeb doors. I have two of them facing north and south, and the other two are facing east and west. Now the north/south facing doors work just fine but the east/west facing doors are not.
So, my question is this: Are Redstone dust and Sticky pistons supposed to function properly regardless of the direction their facing or are they picky?
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
WIP 128x 64x, SEUS support, Mod support in the pipeline TEKKIT, FTB, the more support the more mods!
The problem might be with what type of mono-stable circuit you are using to generate the one-tick pulse. The "piston interruptor" type (the one that breaks the normal pulse by having a piston push the transmitter block away from the signal source) tend to be picky. Replace those with a more conventional comparator-based mono-stable circuit.
Without actually seeing your setup, this is the best advice I can give.
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
To post a comment, please login or register a new account.
Recently I decided to try building the Jeb Door with the intention of trying to make a Fallout type vault at some point, but I ran into an unusual problem.
The structures with yellow circles around them are the Jeb doors. I have two of them facing north and south, and the other two are facing east and west. Now the north/south facing doors work just fine but the east/west facing doors are not.
So, my question is this: Are Redstone dust and Sticky pistons supposed to function properly regardless of the direction their facing or are they picky?
I've heard of certain alignments being direction-specific, so that probably is the issue.
Stay fluffy~
Yes, RS can be finicky about direction.
The problem might be with what type of mono-stable circuit you are using to generate the one-tick pulse. The "piston interruptor" type (the one that breaks the normal pulse by having a piston push the transmitter block away from the signal source) tend to be picky. Replace those with a more conventional comparator-based mono-stable circuit.
Without actually seeing your setup, this is the best advice I can give.