Metalworking Guide

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Casting Age (Copper & Bronzes)

Gathering Ore

There are currently two stone-age methods of gathering ore, running around and looking for them as items on the surface, or by using a Gold Pan.

To make a single metal tool head you will need to collect 10 pieces of small, copper-bearing ore:

Native Copper Tetrahedrite Malachite

If you wish to make bronze tools, you can follow the alloy recipe and replace some of the copper ores with the following:

Bismuthinite Cassiterite Sphalerite Native Gold Native Silver

Smelting

Note: The Vessel can only smelt ores. If you have turned your metals into ingots, you will need to heat them in a forge to liquefy them, or use a Crucible if you plan on making alloys.

Filling a Vessels with Ores for Bronze
A Vessel Containing Molten Bronze

Copper

A Ceramic Vessel can be used to smelt Native Copper, Malachite and Tetrahedrite ore into pure molten copper metal. To do this, fill the vessel with ore (stacks of different ores may be placed together in the same vessel) and then fire it in a kiln.

After the firing, retrieve the vessel from the kiln and right-click it to open up its GUI. You will see that now instead of the usual four slots the vessel has only one and contains text describing the amount of metal it contains. This metal will remain liquid for about 10 Minecraft hours, starting after the firing completes. If the metal inside solidifies, the GUI will not open and you must fire it in a pit kiln again to re-melt it. Note: Vessels with molten metal inside will have a white, "Liquid" tooltip on them.

Bronzes

A Ceramic Vessel can also be used to create Bronze, Black Bronze and Bismuth Bronze.

Before Firing: Place the necessary ores into a Ceramic Vessel, in the proper proportions for the desired type of bronze. For example, if you wanted to create normal Bronze then you would put copper ore (any combination of Native Copper, Malachite or Tetrahedrite) and Cassiterite into the vessel. For each alloy there is a range of proportions which will produce the desired alloy so you don't have to hit an exact percentage, just be within the range.

After Firing: If you got the proportions right then when you right-click the vessel it will open up the same single-slot GUI as described above for smelting pure ores. You can then transfer the molten bronze metal to a Ceramic Mold in the same way. If you got the proportions wrong then when you right-click the vessel you'll get the four-slot storage GUI showing the raw ores still sitting in the vessel, unchanged.

Casting

Ceramic tool and weapon molds can be filled directly from the vessel, or from a liquid unshaped ingot.

All the recipes for tool and weapon molds can be found at the Clay Tool Molds page.

Vessel

Place an empty or partially filled Ceramic Tool, Weapon, or Ingot Mold into the slot to fill it with metal from the vessel. It takes 100 units of metal to completely fill an empty Ceramic Mold. The text in the vessel's GUI will be updated to show the amount of metal remaining in the vessel.

Unshaped Ingot

If the copper or bronze has already been turned into an ingot, simply heat it in a firepit or a forge with an empty ingot mold in the appropriate slot to melt it. While the full, unshaped metal is at liquid temperature, right click with it in your hand to open the casting GUI. You will see an arrow with one slot to its left and two to its right. The leftmost slot will contain the filled mold. Place a single empty tool or weapon mold into the first slot on the right to begin the transfer. Once the transfer is complete the tool mold will move into the output slot and will show itself filled with metal.

Retrieve the filled tool mold and the now-empty Ceramic Mold from the slots on the left. There is a chance that the Ceramic Ingot Mold will be broken and lost during this process.

Once the mold is full, place it into your crafting area and retrieve the finished tool or weapon head from the output. The mold will be destroyed in the process.

Axe Head (Copper)
Ceramic Mold Axe (Copper)
Axe Head (Copper) Copper Axe
Stick

Anvils

In order to progress out of the Casting Age, you will first need to work your way up to a Tier 2 Anvil.

Stone

By using a hammer on the top of a raw Igneous stone block that is in its natural spawning layer, you will open the anvil GUI, where you can weld Copper Ingots into Double Ingots.

Igneous Stone
Igneous Intrusive Diorite Gabbro Granite
Igneous Extrusive Andesite Basalt Dacite Rhyolite

Copper

After you have obtained seven Copper Double Ingots, craft them into a Copper Anvil, where you can weld Bronze Ingots into Double Ingots.

Copper Ingot 2x Copper Ingot 2x Copper Ingot 2x Anvil (Copper)
Copper Ingot 2x
Copper Ingot 2x Copper Ingot 2x Copper Ingot 2x

Bronze

After you have obtained seven Bronze Double Ingots or seven Bismuth Bronze Double Ingots, craft them into an Anvil, where you can work Bronze Double Ingots into Sheets and weld Sheets into Double Sheets.

Bronze Ingot 2x Bronze Ingot 2x Bronze Ingot 2x Anvil (Bronze)
Bronze Ingot 2x
Bronze Ingot 2x Bronze Ingot 2x Bronze Ingot 2x


Iron Age

Gathering Ore

By now you should have a Pickaxe and a Prospector's Pick to use for finding and mining ore.

Smelting

Wrought Iron

Wrought Iron is obtained by working an Iron Bloom that has been created in a Bloomery.

Input Work Type Output Instruction
Raw Iron Bloom Hammer Refined Iron Bloom Work on at least a Tier 2 anvil.
Refined Iron Bloom 200% Hammer Refined Iron Bloom 100% x2 For blooms over 100%. If starting bloom is under 200%, it will split in 1x 100% and 1x the remaining %.
Refined Iron Bloom Hammer Wrought Iron Ingot
Refined Iron Bloom < 100% Melt Unshaped Wrought Iron Melt refined iron bloom into wrought iron in the forge with a ceramic mold in the side slot, or in a crucible.
  • Melting refined iron blooms under 100% in the forge will give partial unshaped ingots, which can be combined if both are at liquid temperature by using the above mentioned Casting Interface.
  • WARNING: Melting a refined iron bloom over 100% in the forge will result in only 1 unshaped ingot. Any excess metal will be lost.

Pig Iron

Pig Iron is obtained by smelting the Iron Ore in a Blast Furnace.

Steel

Input Work Type Output
Pig Iron Ingot Hammer High Carbon Steel Ingot
High Carbon Steel Ingot Hammer Steel Ingot
Black Steel starts from the alloy recipe melted in a crucible. It will show as Weak Steel in the crucible.
Weak Steel Ingot
Pig Iron Ingot
Weld High Carbon Black Steel Ingot
High Carbon Black Steel Ingot Hammer Black Steel Ingot
Blue/Red Steel start from the alloy recipe melted in a crucible. It will show as Weak Blue/Red Steel in the crucible.
Weak Red Steel Ingot
Black Steel Ingot
Weld High Carbon Red Steel Ingot
High Carbon Blue Steel Ingot Hammer Blue Steel Ingot

Smithing

See Anvil page for the guidelines of smithing metal.

Input Work Type Output
Ingot Hammer
Axe Head Chisel Head Hammer Head Hoe Head Javelin Head Knife Blade
Pickaxe Head Prospector's Pick Head Saw Blade Shovel Head Scythe Blade
2 Ingots + Flux Weld File:Grid Gold Ingot 2x.png Double Ingot
Double Ingot Hammer
Mace Head Sword Blade
Double Ingot Hammer Sheet
Sheet Armor Process¹
Helmet Boots
Sheet Hammer²
Red Steel Bucket Blue Steel Bucket
2 Sheets + Flux Weld Double Sheet
Double Sheet Armor Process¹
Chestplate Greaves
Double Sheet Hammer Tuyere