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Author Topic: Should the textile industry be more industrial?  (Read 976 times)

CR055H41RZ

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Should the textile industry be more industrial?
« on: August 12, 2014, 09:48:09 pm »

I've been thinking about mechanics and industry in DF and I thought; well the first mechanized industry irl was the textile industry, so why not have a mechanized textile industry in DF too?
It would be cool to have to build all the makings of a textile plant I think.
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Miuramir

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Re: Should the textile industry be more industrial?
« Reply #1 on: August 13, 2014, 01:05:51 am »

... well the first mechanized industry irl was the textile industry ...

That depends on how you define "mechanised" and "industry", but I'd think that under most definitions the milling of grain and related industry would qualify.  That clearly dates back to at least the first century AD, with such places as the Barbegal aqueduct and mill being particular elaborate examples; a complex system of aqueducts driving 16 water wheels producing an estimated 4.5 tons of flour a day (enough to feed about 10,000 people).  And sure enough, DF has the millstone, which requires mechanical power such as a water wheel or windmill. 

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...so why not have a mechanized textile industry in DF too?

The nominal cut-off date for technology in DF is about 1400 AD, with a strong European bias.  Mechanized textile production doesn't seem to really date before the mid-1700s anywhere; the flying shuttle is about 1733, and was developed to speed *manual* looms and allow wider fabrics.   This led to a demand for more yarn, the famous spinning jenny of about 1764, and so on.  At more than three hundred years past the DF cutoff, it's clearly not "medieval" in the slightest, nor even "renaissance"; in fact, it is usually seen as the definition of the start of the industrial revolution. 
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Larix

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Re: Should the textile industry be more industrial?
« Reply #2 on: August 13, 2014, 03:45:39 am »

Another industry that invested in machinery quite early was ...
mining.

Water (and animal) power was extensively applied in medieval and early modern mining and various machines were used to drain water from the mines and to ventilate them, but also in processing the mines' products - bellows to get furnaces going, stamp mills (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stamp_mill#History) to crush rock/ore for further processing etc.

Georg Agricola's "de re metallica"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_re_metallica
is a good source for early-modern mining and its machines; it shows the state of technology ~1500-1550, but afaik most of what he talks about and displays had been around earlier.
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CR055H41RZ

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Re: Should the textile industry be more industrial?
« Reply #3 on: August 13, 2014, 12:57:41 pm »

I really wish that donkeys and mules were trainable to haul stone to stockpiles
It'd be a good alternative to minecarts which at least in my fort aren't really practical due to it's architecture
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Hans Lemurson

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Re: Should the textile industry be more industrial?
« Reply #4 on: August 13, 2014, 01:39:03 pm »

Another industry that invested in machinery quite early was ...
mining.

Water (and animal) power was extensively applied in medieval and early modern mining and various machines were used to drain water from the mines and to ventilate them, but also in processing the mines' products - bellows to get furnaces going, stamp mills (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stamp_mill#History) to crush rock/ore for further processing etc.

Georg Agricola's "de re metallica"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_re_metallica
is a good source for early-modern mining and its machines; it shows the state of technology ~1500-1550, but afaik most of what he talks about and displays had been around earlier.

Wait, you mean you don't just chuck a boulder in an oven and come back the next day to retrieve a bar of pure metal?
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Foolprooof way to penetrate aquifers of unlimited depth.  (Make sure to import at least 10 stones for mechanisms)
Toughen Dwarves by dropping stuff on them.  (Nothing too heavy though, and make sure to wear armor.)
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"Urist had a little lamb
whose feet tracked blighted soot.
And into every face he saw
his sooty foot he put."

Tacomagic

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Re: Should the textile industry be more industrial?
« Reply #5 on: August 13, 2014, 02:54:15 pm »

If you mean pumping waste products into the river, then YES!  I cannot imaging anything more Dorfy than waging environmental war on those tree-humping hippies the elves.
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Swonnrr

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Re: Should the textile industry be more industrial?
« Reply #6 on: August 13, 2014, 05:21:18 pm »

If you mean pumping waste products into the river, then YES!  I cannot imaging anything more Dorfy than waging environmental war on those tree-humping hippies the elves.

I already have a refuse stockpile linked to a minecart that dump everything in a hole. Some forts it's a 30z pit inside, some it's a volcano. And sometimes it's the river.
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