If you take a look at how much goes in per input station and then what comes out the other side does not add up. We should be producing more.
For instance my Noise Boss Earbuds machine,
Each conveyor belt carrys 6 parts but counts as one,
So that’s 6 circuit boards, 6 audio modules, 14 moulded ear buds goes into the assembly machine.
Then only a pair comes out of the machine and counts as 1 set,
Surely if 6 parts are going in at 1 time, 6 should come out?
It is 1:1, yes. Unless you have multiple input machines of the same kind going into one machine. Not sure how you would get 6, 6, 14. Unless you meant 12 and you have two belts bringing the molded plastic in - don’t do that!
Check your production of ingredients vs intake for assembly. There does seem to be a slight difference - I can’t remember the exact figures but something that’s 5 mins per item should create 12 items per hour in a perfect world but my output displays something like 11.92.
There’s a bit of effort in managing your production of ingredients vs the assembly of the final product - I actually had everything in notepad and excel to work it all out for burgers and kabobs
Takes a bit of mathing to get everything lined up. Each input/output seems to be able to handle about 60 items per hour so outputting two sliced cheese cutters to one output seemed to overload it because (and I might be slightly off here because going off memory) but it’s like 4 mins each output for 1 cheese to 4 sliced cheese - which means 2 produces 8 sliced cheese every 4 mins which is 120 per hour and it seemed to get overloaded so I had to have separate outputs
I think it’s more of the graphics you can see, I think it shows multiple quantities of a part but it’s actually 1. Like the size of the glass and you get just one small screen from a massive piece of glass