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Barn factory town6/21/2023 ![]() Note that single inventory slots can still only be assigned a single specific item. This shows several different advanced filters working simultaneously: You can also specify if your filter should only include the Packed version of an item, or the Unpacked version (or keep default behavior, which allows either). This option appears on Logistic Block filters, and is useful if you had a train that must have two or more specific item types. And you can even stack these together on the same filter - include or exclude as many items as you want. You can Exclude a whole category like "Fruit". Now you can set an item as "Exclude" and the item will NOT pass if it matches that condition. Right-click on the icon to open an options menu. You can also set some advanced conditions on your item filters. ![]() The item, worker, or train will pass if it matches (or is holding) any of the selected items. You can now select multiple items in a single filter! Just shift+click to add more items (or right-click to open a menu, and hit "Include"). You can find the patch notes below: Multi-Item Filters Additionally, a new global rule prevents players from moving storage buildings that contain items. This means players can be creative with their selection, but this only works in creative mode. The new update also allows players to paint textures onto the terrain. The logistics update includes multiple new features such as multi-item filters, which allows players to select multiple items in a single click. You can build this model yourself using Lions Gate Models’ high quality instructions.Erik Asmussen, the developer of Factory Town, recently released a new update that introduced the new logistics update, new features, and some general bug fixes. The ridge beam and cupola fit between the gable peaks, the hoist support fits at one end over the hayloft door, and the two sides of the roof fit between the ridge beam and the side walls. The upper hayloft floor slides into place between the gables (making sure the hayloft door is closed, or it will pop off its hinges!) and settles down on its supporting beams. The main section includes the lower floor, stalls, and end gable walls. Morphing back from our minifig selves into the real world, here are the components of the barn. Manfred Moolhuysen, Amsterdam, The Netherlands The nicely simulated haystack and the cute ventilation hood give your design a real finishing touch. Ever since those marvelous “plate steel” custom doors of the “Factory”-kit I know you have a great talent for inventing such doors, and the “Classic Red Barn”-kit would definitely not have been the same without it’s white-trimmed sliding doors. ![]() The custom constuction of the sliding doors and the attic/hoist door. Furthermore, this is separated from the floor with tiles, so it’s “showable” for appreciation. The timber support for the attic floor is depicted as it would work in a real wooden building. I’d like to point out some or the (in my humble opinion) most attractive and clever ideas:Ī feeding trough that runs along the life stock boxes, and the set of windows likewise. Back when airplanes flew low enough to read messages on barn roofs, several companies approached Sam wanting to place adverts on the roof, but he always said no, he preferred his roof to be like himself – saying little. Here’s a good view of the big gambrel roof and the cupola. On either side are the storage areas for the hay, held back by a low wall at each side, and at the far end, the grain room where the grain itself was stored. In former times when many farmers grew a diversity of crops, including their own grain, the wooden floor down the centre was the threshing floor. There’s a small window over each stall, another pair of large sliding doors in the side wall, and a small “people door” at the far end. Inside the barn are four stalls with mangers, built into the framework of the big old posts and beams, black with age overhead. Above us is the hayloft door, where at haying time the big bales are swung from the wagon into the loft using the crane hook hanging from the hoist beam. We’ll head in through the big sliding doors at the end of the barn. Farmer Sam, who showed us around the farmhouse when we visited, is happy to take us on a tour of the barn. This model of the classic North American red barn is a perfect match for the farmhouse.
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