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Angelo Kerman

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Everything posted by Angelo Kerman

  1. The Sombrero and Telegraph and Gaslight cannot be surface-attached due to the way KIS works. If you drop the surface-attachable part on the ground, they tend to explode (or used to). By not surface attaching them, I stopped the explosions. Those parts are meant to be static attached to the ground.
  2. Made couple of new station parts for DSEV. New Omni Hub: With new Structural Spacer (which also has a reaction wheel):
  3. New Omni Hub: With new Structural Spacer (which also has a reaction whee):
  4. I don't use B9 part switch but it does make sense if it adds its part switching module to any fuel tank. I might be able to create a patch that removes the B9 part switcher (along with IFS Fuel Switch, it causes the same headaches).
  5. Definitely going to make the truss, I just don't want to mess up existing ships if I remove the hollow option from the double hex truss. It'll be much easier for me to revise the part that way... Meanwhile, I'm making good progress on the Estonian IVA:
  6. OSE requires that some parts use resources other than MaterialKits. That might explain what you're seeing. Did the base collide with the ground or something? That's been a very frustrating problem for me too.
  7. Question about people who use the double hex truss: Do you use the hollow options at all? Having hollow trusses for the quarter, half, and regular-sized hex truss make sense, but I'm not sure it does for the double. Reason I ask is that I'm planning on modifying the double-truss so that it can be up to 10x its current size, similarly to how the stock payload fairing works: by attaching a part to one of the nodes above the fairing, you suddenly get a truss assembly to fill in the void. The ML-20 Hex Truss would be up to 80m long, though that might get a little unwieldy in the VAB/SPH. It would not make sense to have a truss that long that's hollow. It would still retain its crew tube and fuel tank options- with appropriately adjusted capacity...
  8. No changes on my end. I added the ability to convert from MaterialKits to Equipment, and notice that I need to rename that converter. Anything having to do with part production through OSE Workshop is handled by the OSE Workshop mod. So if it changed its requirements, it wasn't me.
  9. I'm not planning on creating any texture packs for procedural parts, and once the new version of KAS is out of beta I can add support for it.
  10. I'm going to guess that you're just not able to use WBI mods. I don't know why you're having install issues; nobody else is having that problem, or I'd see a lot more complaints. All the WBI mods are up to date with the latest WildBlueTools and the BARIS bridge. The only thing I can think of is completely remove all WBI mods, then install all the ones you want, and see what happens. If that doesn't work, then I don't know what it could be.
  11. Very much appreciated, thank you. Explodium, also known as nuclear salt water, can be made from water and enriched uranium/blutonium in the nukeworks. You might find some concentrations of it in asteroids where the nuclear materials have leached into the water. Eve has a lot as well; it's called the Explodium Sea with good reason. I figure that with oceans of liquid methane and liquid nitrogen, an ocean of water and uranium oxide isn't terribly far fetched; with the right filters you could process that stuff into nuclear salt water or into fuel for nuclear reactors. If @Nertea's Far Future Tech is installed, I'll see about adapting the processors to make nuclear salt water (not sure how its named) instead. Anyway, right now I don't have engines that use it but the Odyssey Three release will have an engine called the Trinity that will, and the ISV Ventur Star-alike engine will likely run on it as one of its fuel sources. Aha: found it on @Nertea' Git hub page: RESOURCE_DEFINITION { name = NuclearSaltWater // Nuclear fuel displayName = #LOC_FFT_resource_NuclearSaltWater_title abbreviation =#LOC_FFT_resource_NuclearSaltWater_abbrev density = 0.00105 unitCost = 4 isTweakable = true isVisible = true flowMode = NO_FLOW transfer = PUMP volume = 1 } https://github.com/ChrisAdderley/FarFutureTechnologies/releases Will definitely do some compatibility updates for the next release.
  12. Purple (acid) rain, purrrple (acid) rain... Oh definitely! Between the force field and the mining pyramid, I suspect that the contested desert is about to heat up, so to speak...
  13. It's Ancient Kerman for Eve. There's no obvious entry points into the pyramids, and no useful information on the force field that their instruments could detect. It would take more advanced science instruments to do any detailed analysis. There's only so much that the airship can do, even with the refit done before K.E.E.P. began...
  14. Yeah, I was surprised to find them as well, so I had to come up with an explanation for them..
  15. “This rock isn’t going to suddenly fall and break something, is it? Do we need to move the Akron,” Captain James asked. “No sir, it’s safe,” Mosa answered, looking at the strange rock floating in the air above the desert floor. “What makes it float? Does it have any of that ‘graviolium’ of Munvan’s?” “Oh yeah it does, Jim. It’s the weirdest thing. When we picked up samples of the stuff at the Bruoso Monolith, Dr. Munvan zapped the graviolium flakes with electricity and they floated. At the time, we attributed it to the small sample sizes and ion wind. Now, we’re not so sure. “Why is that?” “This rock,” Mosa pointed skyward, “has as a core of graviolium based on our radar scans- which are very weird, by the way. On some frequencies the core is hollow, like it has no density. On others it registers as a superdense core. The samples in the lab do the same thing, which is how we know the rock has a graviolium core. Anyway, this rock masses several tonnes. Physics says that it should be laying on the sand, not hovering meters above it. We’re sure that the graviolium is what is making it hover, and electricity is involved somehow, but we’re not sure how it works.” “Can’t you just zap the new samples like you did before?” “We tried that, Jim,” Mosa admitted, “but the larger samples didn’t even budge. It might be that we need a much larger electric charge, but we really don’t know.” “Speaking of budging, why doesn’t the rock move in the wind?” “It probably does, just not very much. But there’s also lots of magnetism here, so maybe it’s trapped in one of the magnetic fields... Anyway, like I said, the rock masses several tonnes. Right now, it’s pretty much weightless but it still has mass.” Captain James gave Mosa a puzzled look, so she continued her explanation. “In physics, mass represents an object’s resistance to acceleration when a net force is applied to it. It also determines the strength of the gravitational attraction between objects. Normally, the two go hand in hand, but it appears that graviolium somehow cancels out the gravitational attraction- its ‘gravitational mass’ if you will- while retaining its resistance to acceleration- its ‘inertial mass’.” “Wait, Mosa,” Captain James put up his hand, “why is that so special? Astronauts float around all the time in orbit, aren’t they separating gravitational and inertial mass?” “Actually, no, Jim. Objects in orbit are affected by the pull of gravity, but they’re going so fast they just fall around Kerbin without hitting the ground. In that case, both gravitational and inertial mass apply- small RCS thrusters impart small momentum changes and all that, while big changes can reach escape velocity. But with graviolium cancelling the pull of gravity…” “The object would just fly off into space as if you had a rocket on a string whirling around your head, and you let go of the string,” Captain James finished for her, finally remembering his orbital mechanics class. Of course, he couldn't tell her about it... “The whole ‘fall towards the ground and missing’ thing reminds me of a book I once read… “Alright, this is all pretty fascinating stuff- and we’re definitely claiming the graviolium cache as salvage. We’ll stash it in one of the fuel bunkers away from prying eyes, just in case. In the meantime, what’s the status of the pyramid investigation? Do we need to set up a base at the ‘movie set,’ or are you ready to move on?” “We’re about done here, Jim,” Mosa answered. “There’s not much more that we can do with the instruments we have. I’ve got the cadets imaging every centimeter of the complex and they’ll be done in a couple of days. After that, we can hop over to the ‘movie set’ and see if there’s anything we can learn from it.” “Very well,” Captain James said, “let me know when you’ve completed your investigation.” *** Three days later, the cadets still weren’t done and had to redo several sections. It was tedious work, so Akron’s crew took a break from their investigation to watch a momentous event- for the first time ever, a space probe from Kerbin entered Duna’s sphere of influence! Elcano 1, a hastily assembled Duna lander that was launched six months ago shortly after the Pioneer probes, arrived at Duna first in a twist of fate courtesy of orbital mechanics. There was barely any signal strength available to control the probe- it was designed to use the Pioneers as relays- so Mission Control had to be extra careful when they radioed Elcano’s next set of maneuvers. If it successfully entered Duna orbit, it would still have to wait for the Pioneers to provide communications before attempting a landing. After marveling at the images sent back, the crew got back to work. A day and a half later, they finally finished their survey of the Great Mining Pyramid, just in time to watch Elcano-1’s attempt to orbit the rusty planet. The landing probe coasted ever closer to the planet with eyes around KSC, in orbit, and aboard the Akron watching their displays intently. Ten minutes to go Duna Insertion Burn (DIB). Pioneer 3 reached out to the probe and established a firm connection, much to the relief of the Elcano science team. Five minutes to DIB. Elcano 1 oriented its engine for the insertion burn. It needed 804.5 m/sec of delta-V to achieve orbit. Luckily the transfer stage had nearly twice that. Images relayed back showed a dusty atmosphere. An enormous canyon looked like a crack in the planet. One minute to go, and the planet loomed ever larger. Would BARIS- the legendary angry kraken from Scripture- give his blessing to the probe? Or would he cast it off into solar orbit? BARIS was all just superstition of course, but if systems failed, the probe would have a bad day. Elcano received commands to run its temperature and pressure instruments. If something went wrong, at least they’d have some data to return. T minus 0. Elcano’s transfer stage started the burn. Several tense seconds passed while scientists and engineers held their breath. Cheers rang out throughout Mission Control as Elcano 1 entered a 311km by 156km orbit around Duna! Data from the temperature and pressure instruments started to stream in. “Well done, Elcano team,” Gene shouted out. “Drinks are on us!” “I guess I owe you 50 kerbucks,” Wernher said to Linus, “your team did a good job on that probe.” *** With their investigation completed, the Akron lifted into the sky but kept low; the ‘movie set’ anomaly was a mere 25km away. They set down to take a look, but there wasn’t much that the crew could discern from the atomic-powered device beyond the realization that it had an inner ring of symbols that appeared to rotate with great effort. The explorers recorded their observations, spotted another floating rock lazily drifting by, and headed to the next desert anomaly on their list. The airship had to backtrack across the Great Desert and head towards the coast to reach its next destination. As they weaved their way between the desert hills though, the Akron encountered something unexpected… “There, off to the left,” Liscella pointed out, “about ten o’clock. What’s that?” Captain James spotted it as well. “Looks like an airfield of some sort.” “Out here in the desert?” Liscella checked her charts. “There’s nothing listed out this way. The nearest one is Dead Kerbal Pit, and it’s about 131km away, back the way we came.” “Anything on ATC?” “Checking… ATC is pinging ‘Kerbin Galactic’ at 35km away. “Who the Moho is Kerbin Galactic?” “Don’t know, Jim, never heard of them. Want me to hail them on the wireless?” “Yeah, let’s see who they are.” It didn’t take long for them to get a response… “Akron, this is Kerbin Galactic ATC,” the air traffic controller said in his thick vonKerman accent. “You are entering restricted airspace. Turn left immediately to heading 180 and land on runway 090 for inspections.” “Captain,” Liscella asked, “can they do that?” “Bridge, Flight Ops,” Kimgee blurted out over the ship’s intercom, “radar contact, fast mover, bearing 180, headed straight for us. It’s breaking the sound barrier! Estimated contact in less than 30 seconds!” The sonic boom rattled the Akron as the jet sped by. “There’s your answer, Lieutenant Commander,” Captain James replied. “That’s a KE-162 Kraken, one of the first jet aircraft. It was built at the tail end of the Last War.” “Aircraft is turning and slowing down,” Kimgee reported. “It’s lining up on our tail.” “Kerman airship, this is Kosmodrome Patrol. Follow your instructions and land on Runway 090 or you will be shot down,” the jet’s pilot demanded over the wireless. The Kraken flew just above the Akron’s cruising speed and came dangerously close. It buzzed the command gondola as it roared past. It was clearly armed. The pilot repeated his demands. “So much for the little training cruise,” Captain James quipped. He sighed and pressed the ship-wide intercom. “All hands, this is the captain. Prepare for landing and inspections.” *** “The Great Desert is considered international waters. You have no sovereignty here,” Captain James argued. “Forcing us to land is highly illegal.” “Technically the Desert Protectorate is a condominium- a political territory with joint ownership,” Gerwin vonKerman, the VKR case officer responded. “But that is beside the point. The Kosmodrome is in territory claimed by the vonKerman Republic for scientific purposes as allowed by treaty and is owned by Kerbin Galactic. You are therefore trespassing on private property, and our security force is permitted to defend our property.” “The vonKerman Republic military is a security force here? Right, sure,” Captain James said sarcastically. "Isn't forcing us down for tresspassing a little excessive?" “We are hired contractors,” Gerwin pointed out, “How the Republic utilizes its forces is none of your concern.” James scoffed at the notion. “If you’re so concerned about trespassing, why not just turn us away from your airspace?” “My employer is on the verge of launching orbital rockets but isn’t ready to make a public statement. Had we let you go, your reports it would’ve created a public relations catastrophe.” “So we’re your prisoners then,” Captain James stated. “You are our guests.” “Right. You realize that having rocket launch facilities is a treaty violation, don’t you?” “Of course,” Gerwin retorted. “No nation is permitted the possession or use of rocketry of any kind. That was a condition of the Total Disarmament Treaty. That is why the Republic discontinued its rocketry program, and, as I said, Kerbin Galactic is a commercial space company, much like your own ‘Kerbal Space Program’ is. Perhaps the Republic should take a closer look to ensure that your company is abiding by international law, eh?” James remained quiet. If the VKR looked too closely, they’d notice that KSP was a commercially funded government agency. That could create problems. He tried a different tactic. “The Akron’s command staff are officially sanctioned TDT compliance auditors. By forcing us to land, you are interfering with a government investigation. My team is en route to a TDT surprise audit site to verify that the suspected site contains no atomic weapons. Your interference in an official investigation will cause an international incident unless you release us immediately.” Now it was Gerwin’s turn to change tactics. “Yes, I’ve read about your exploits, but only your experiences about traveling around the world are public, not any of the audits. Why is that?” “We aren’t required to release our findings,” the captain retorted. “No, I guess not. But… you are required to allow observers from the host nation to accompany you on your audits if so requested. Your site is just inside the Republic border, is it not? I think that if the Republic sends observers with you, we can avoid an international incident- and clear up this trespassing issue as well. Your arrival here could be seen as part of the process.” Mulch, walked right into that one, Captain James thought to himself. We won’t be able to hide anything we find. “I’ll have to consult with my government,” Captain James finally answered. “Of course. As will I. That might take a day or two. In the meantime, I will ask my superiors to provide you with good viewing of Kerbin Galactic’s launches. As a gesture of good faith.” “About that,” Captain James asked. “We had no idea that you had a space program of your own. How did you build those rockets so quickly? Sterntal was shut down years ag-” Except they had those ‘RTG’ things, He thought to himself. “Ah, yes. The vonKerman Republic was on the verge of launching craft into space before the Great War ended and the Total Disarmament Treaty was signed. In the interests of diplomacy, we stored our vessels until the time was right for them to fly, which was not long after your nation began flying rockets. If things went differently, my nation would’ve been the first to achieve orbit, not yours. Who is to say that we didn’t, eh?” *** As they awaited word from KSC, Captain James and his crew were shuttled to a viewing area for the launches. The crew could see not one, but three launch pads, two of which had vehicles readied for flight. “To your left is the Elektron,” Irina vonKerman, the Kerbin Galactic liaison said from the viewing booth. “It is our cargo rocket. It carries the Hause space station. It is uh, like your ‘MOLE’ station. The Launch Control Officer counted down… “Drei, zwei, eins, EinfÜhrung!” Fire and steam erupted from the pad and the Elektron quickly cleared the tower. Moments later the roar of the engines rattled the building’s windows. The Elektron left a trail of fire as it clawed its way into the sky. For several minutes, Irina translated the launch events. “Elektron has turned towards the horizon… the rocket has breached the atmosphere… fairings deployed… Rocket has circularized its orbit- 125.9km by 122.6km… Hause has detached from the carrier rocket… Elektron is performing its de-orbit burn… Hause just flew over your Kerbal Space Center,” she said triumphantly. She listened to the announcer. “Hanse and Alice report ready to launch.” “Wait,” Liscella said, holding up her hand, “You’re conducting two launches today?” Irina simply smiled. “Watch.” Moments later, the rocket from the central pad lifted off of its platform and roared into the sky. A minute and a half later, it jettisoned its side booster and continued its climb into orbit. “Alder has breached the atmosphere… Oh no… Control reports abnormal fairing deployment. The solar arrays are broken, and Alder detached from its carrier rocket prematurely!” “Are they going to abort,” Captain James asked. Irina listened to the announcer. “Nein, Control reports that the kerbonauts are unharmed, and the Alder capsule can finish the orbital insertion burn. If there are no more malfunctions, they will continue to the station.” Four minutes later, the Alder spacecraft completed its orbital insertion burn. “Systems are acceptable,” Irina translated, “they’re headed to Hause…” An hour and a half later, Alder reached the vonKerman space station. Irina continued to translate. “Alder lacks reaction control rockets, so Hanse may try an unorthodox technique to dock- they originally were simply going to practice rendezvous and then return to Kerbin. They are losing battery power though.” “That sounds risky,” Kelbin said aloud. “Without risk there is no reward,” Irina responded. “Yes, but isn’t that a bit too risky for your first mission,” Kelbin pressed. “Is it our first mission?” Irina grinned. “We’ve had one other launch before today, without kerbonauts aboard.” The crew listened to Irina’s translations for several tense minutes until she squealed with delight. “Oh my, Hanse did it! Our first successful docking, despite all the damage during ascent, in a capsule not equipped with control rockets!” “Impressive,” Captain James admitted. “Congratulations. What happens now?” “I believe Hanse and Alice will spend a few days at Hause to thoroughly assess the damage to their craft and activate the station, though they weren’t trained for that mission. I am sure my company will ready Alder 3 for launch as well, just in case the kerbonauts need a rescue.” *** The next day, the Akron and her crew, along with Gerwin vonKerman, set out once again in search of the next anomaly after some cursory inspections. They resumed their previous course into the desert. Gerwin enjoyed the view from one of the last surviving airships, one that his nation built prior to the Last War prior to selling it to the Kerman States. “Contact, anomaly bearing 0 degrees, 225 true, range 19.2,” Kimgee called out over the ship’s intercom. “Wunderbar! This is so exciting,” Gerwin pressed the talk button and said excitedly. “How soon until we reach this suspect site of yours?” “Just a few minutes,” Kimgee responded. “I have a visual,” Samalla said, pointing out to the horizon. She clicked the cockpit mics off. “Looks like another pyramid, Kelbin.” Kelbin nodded. “Yeah, this is above our paygrade.” He clicked the intercom. “Captain to the bridge,” A few seconds later, Captain James relieved Kelbin, who took the copilot seat, Samalla went to the Gondo Hab. “Crew, this is the Captain, we’re beginning our descent. Audit Team, prepare for inspections,” Captain James said formally. The Akron Majestically set down on the level ground next to the pyramid complex. Liscella, Mosa, Raphia, and Gerwin boarded the Fido rover- its design definitely approved for future space exploration- and set out to explore the complex. There first stop was a giant statue of a kerbal with a long and pointy beard. “Erstaunich, what an interesting statue,” Gerwin vonKerman said with a thick accent. “The construction is very crude, clearly ancient kerbals made it.” Raphia walked forward to touch the statue. “I wonder- oomph!” She abruptly stopped, as if she ran into a glass windowed door. “I can’t approach the statue!” “Some kind of force prevents me to touch it as well,” Gerwin said, reaching out. “Perfectly smooth, and slippery.” Rapha wiped her hand on the force field. “It’s frictionless,” she concluded. “I guess we know what the atomic signature is for: to power this force field.” “I wonder if your other ‘audit sites’ are like this one,” Gerwin mused. “The Republic should request all the sites you visited within our borders.” Liscella, Mosa, and Raphia exchanged glances but said nothing. “Let’s see if this force field extends any further,” she said, trying to deflect the conversation. The inspection team piled back into the rover for a trip around the pyramid. They drove around the pyramid but found no strange force fields protecting it. Instead they found that the entire structure was made of dried and cracked dirt, with a hodgepodge of stonework peeking through were the dirt had fallen away. The stonework had several gaps in between the stones. Liscella guided the rover to the other pyramids in the complex. Four small stepped pyramids stood out from the larger middle two like sentries guarding the larger ones. Not seeing anything standing out, the team drove to the smaller of the two big pyramids. It too had a half-wall, and it too was made of dry cracked dirt and had no obvious entryway. They returned to the statue to investigate it in more detail. “There, up on the chest, to its right,” Mosa noticed. “Is that an inscription?” “Looks like it,” Liscella answered. It appeared to be petroglyphs of some sort. She took some images. “Anybody recognize the writing?” Everyone in the rover answered no. Nobody aboard the Akron knew either. “Perhaps someone in the Republic knows the language,” Gerwin suggested. “My government will be quite excited to have such an important find within our borders!” *** They sent the images to their superiors in the vonKerman Republic and the Kerman States and then spent a week investigating the site but had little to show for it. Like the rest of the temple, the force field guarding the statue remained a mystery. With little else to discover, the Akron took to the skies once again, heading back to the Kosmodrome to drop off Gerwin vonKerman and take on some fuel before heading back to the Kerman States and on to the Glantri Principalities to seek out the final anomalies on their list. Along the way, KSC held a conference call with the Akron’s crew and guest. Bobfel Kerman, one of Wernher’s scientists, recognized the writings right away. “That’s Ancient Kerman,” Bobfel said confidently. “The glyphs state that the statue is of Tut-Un Jeb-Ahn, Gatekeeper to the ‘Otherworld Thel.’” “Tut-Un Jeb-Ahn? Is that a joke,” Liscella asked. “It’s no joke, this phrase spells out Jeb,” Bobfel retorted. “You’re kidding.” “Nope. I’m an expert in Ancient Kerman. So I know what it says. Though that last bit could be 'Gael.' The two are pretty close and that section is rather weathered.” “Wow,” Liscella said simply. “Oh, it gets better,” Bobfel said excitedly. “One of the competing theories about the origin of Scripture is that Kerbin, Giver of Life and Knowledge, grabbed a seer named Jeb by the head and shown a bright light into his eyes. After the encounter he wrote down his visions.” Now it was Mosa’s turn to say “wow.” “I wonder if Jeb’s parents knew about this theory,” Mosa mused. “So you’re suggesting that this Tut-Un Jeb-Ahn wrote Scripture?” “Maybe,” Bobfel answered. “Other more practical theories suggest that Scripture was written and added to over time as ancient kerbals tried to understand the universe and their place in it. The Tut might have been the first to write down some of those stories. But like playing telephone, they morphed over time as others revised Scripture.” “What about this Thel or Gael that he’s guarding,” Raphia asked. “It’s the ancients’ version of the afterlife,” Bobfel said. “Thel is what we call Moho in modern Scripture, while Gael translates to Paradise. Uh, Eve, in Modern Kerman.” “This is all really interesting,” Liscella said. “I can’t believe-“ “Liscella to the bridge,” Captain James interrupted over the intercom, “we’re landing at the Kosmodrome.”
  16. I've verified that the garden is working properly with the latest release: Also, Heisenberg 2.8.8 is now available: - Fixed missing power requirements for the Gondo Drill. - Hid deprecated version of the Cyclone engine. - WBT update
  17. DSEV 2.4.2 is now available. It's just a WBT update but it updates some things.
  18. If you can create a list of parts and their proper TAC-LS balance, then I can put that in the next update. In general, command pods should have 12 days of life support per kerbal (assuming one day = 6 hours). Also heads up to USI-LS users: if nobody can provide me with properly balanced parts by the next patch update, I'll be dropping USI-LS support from my mods. The MM patches are horribly out of date at this point. Meanwhile, Pathfinder 1.14 is now available: New Part - Micro ISRU (Advanced Science Tech): This Buckboard-sized ISRU is capable of producing only one resource at a time but it comes with its own built-in advanced solar panel to power the conversion process. Bug Fixes & Enhancements - GoldStrike drills now properly catch up after you haven't visited the vessel in awhile. - Fixed ground-based extraction rates for GoldStrike resource lodes. - Fixed missing power requirements for the Gold Digger drill. - Fixed missing power requirements for the Buffalo Drill. - Added ability to (slowly) 3D print Equipment from MaterialKits in the Blacksmith and Clockworks. - Adjusted recycling rate of Equipment into MaterialKits in the Blacksmith and Clockworks. - The Saddle and Switchback 2 now have air park capability to reduce base slippage. USE WITH CAUTION! If you set the parking brake, be sure to immediately quick save and reload to make sure the brake is set.
  19. Thanks, I'll have to make a new part to handle that. Meanwhile, Buffalo 2.3.0 is now available: New Part - Micro ISRU (Advanced Science Tech): This Buckboard-sized ISRU is capable of producing only one resource at a time but it comes with its own built-in advanced solar panel to power the conversion process. Bug Fixes & Enhancements - Fixed missing power requirements for the Buffalo Drill.
  20. BARIS 1.4.7 is now available: KAC Vehicle Integration - Vessel integration timer now relies on the KAC alarm, significantly improving accuracy. - Vessel integration timer now accurately reflects delays due to work stoppage events. - If you delete your integration alarm before vehicle integration is completed, then the corresponding VAB/SPH bay will be cleared as well and its integration efforts lost. - The High Bay/Hangar Bay Load button won't be available until vehicle integration has completed. - The High Bay/Hangar Bay vessel integration shows the final reliability after vehicle integration. NOTE: These improvements only apply to new vessel integration, not existing projects. Bug Fixes & Enhancements - Fixed missing user message during launch failures.
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