Bedrock has an 18 million BLAST RADIUS meaning, one cannot mine through it. But one can explode his or her way through.
TNT has a blast radius damage of 4. So we divide 18M by 4. Which would equal out to: 4,500,000. Meaning, it would take 4 million, 500 thousand TNT to destroy said block. And since blocks regenerate health when something Isn't touching it, means that you'd have to set of all 4.5M at ONCE. And I'm fairly sure no computer in the world could handle that.
I'm not sure if you can actually mine bedrock. Code for bedrock. hardness determines how hard it is to mine with a pickaxe, and resistance is how hard it is to destroy with an explosion. So, I'm pretty sure it's impossible to mine -1.
bedrock = (new Block(7, 17, Material.rock)).setHardness(-1F).setResistance(6000000F).setStepSound(soundStoneFootstep).setBlockName("bedrock");
No, considering the hardness is -1 and blocks break when it reaches 0 there is no possible chance of breaking it... But there IS a chance you can blow it up with **** loads of tnt
there was a thread exactly like this a while ago on the forum. i cant find it cause search is broken.
but you need that all TNTs adjacents from the block you want to destroy, if you want to blast bedrock, you would need all the TNTs around the said block, with is impossible to archive.
there was a thread exactly like this a while ago on the forum. i cant find it cause search is broken.
but you need that all TNTs adjacents from the block you want to destroy, if you want to blast bedrock, you would need all the TNTs around the said block, with is impossible to archive.
Exactly. There is no possible way of placing 4.5 MILLION TNT all around ONE block. And keeping it close enough to have maximum blast radius.
Get Zombe's modpack.
Enable builder mod.
Break everything
Thats hardly the point.
Lol I know. In all seriousness, bedrock can be broken by TNT, I've seen it in this video.
-snip-
This may be fake, though...
It's not fake. However, he didn't break bedrock either. There was a lava lake there right around level 1 or 2. Since lava lakes always have stone at the bottom, and they are generated after the bedrock, any bedrock that would normally make up the bottom of the lake gets turned into stone. It is possible to break stone.
1. get worldedit, either on singleplayer commands or Bukkit on a server.
2. type "//" into the textbox
3. Use the super pick axe to mine through the bedrock
4. ???
5. Profit
Bedrock has an 18 million BLAST RADIUS meaning, one cannot mine through it. But one can explode his or her way through.
TNT has a blast radius damage of 4. So we divide 18M by 4. Which would equal out to: 4,500,000. Meaning, it would take 4 million, 500 thousand TNT to destroy said block. And since blocks regenerate health when something Isn't touching it, means that you'd have to set of all 4.5M at ONCE. And I'm fairly sure no computer in the world could handle that.
I'm not sure if you can actually mine bedrock. Code for bedrock. hardness determines how hard it is to mine with a pickaxe, and resistance is how hard it is to destroy with an explosion. So, I'm pretty sure it's impossible to mine -1.
bedrock = (new Block(7, 17, Material.rock)).setHardness(-1F).setResistance(6000000F).setStepSound(soundStoneFootstep).setBlockName("bedrock");
Afaik, the only way to mine through bedrock, would be to mine it for so long you overflow the 'damage' integer, it wraps around to its ultimate negative limit, and you work your way back to -1. However, I estimate that would take somewhere between 10 and 60 years of holding down your mouse button, depending on what you were using to do it. I could be wrong about how exactly this programming is handled, but don't really care to check further into it.
"Although debate has led over whether Bedrock is able to be destroyed, Notch confirmed on the 11th of February 2011, during a Machinima Live stream[2], that it is indestructible, or so solid that the amount of TNT(about 360,000) it would to take to destroy it would more than certainly crash your computer, therefore the save file would show no evidence of the explosion ever happening."
No amount of TNT will break bedrock, despite the quote from Notch. Further, bedrock cannot be broken by any amount of TNT, and huge amounts of TNT won't break it.
No amount of picking will break bedrock. Bedrock cannot be broken by an infinity of pickaxing, and using a pickaxe on it will never break it.
(The video is fake, and false to boot.)
Bedrock does not break. Breaking is a thing bedrock doesn't do, and not a thing bedrock does.
No amount of TNT will break bedrock, despite the quote from Notch. Further, bedrock cannot be broken by any amount of TNT, and huge amounts of TNT won't break it.
No amount of picking will break bedrock. Bedrock cannot be broken by an infinity of pickaxing, and using a pickaxe on it will never break it.
(The video is fake, and false to boot.)
Bedrock does not break. Breaking is a thing bedrock doesn't do, and not a thing bedrock does.
Here's a quick Venn diagram to explain it:
In short, you cannot break bedrock.
Cool. Read the code, then go look at the blast radius of TNT. Its more of a can, but you can't thing.
Cool. Read the code, then go look at the blast radius of TNT. Its more of a can, but you can't thing.
Read the code, and look at the blast strength of TNT. It's entirely a "TNT damage doesn't stack" thing.
Just to be clear, go back and read what I wrote, especially the part where I said, "no."
I've heard that the code allows damage stacking as long as the explosions affect a block simultaneously. Unfortunately, I can't find any videos that have even tried to demonstrate this using even obsidian. Of course, given that I'm not even sure what an individual TNT's strength is, I'm not sure how much activated TNT you would have to compress to destroy a block of obsidian.
Probably the easiest way to test if damage has any stacking capabilities is seeing if enough simultaneously activated TNT can destroy a water source (obviously, you would have to do this without allowing the TNT to become submerged, as that prevents it from damaging blocks).
TNT has a blast radius damage of 4. So we divide 18M by 4. Which would equal out to: 4,500,000. Meaning, it would take 4 million, 500 thousand TNT to destroy said block. And since blocks regenerate health when something Isn't touching it, means that you'd have to set of all 4.5M at ONCE. And I'm fairly sure no computer in the world could handle that.
I'm not sure if you can actually mine bedrock. Code for bedrock. hardness determines how hard it is to mine with a pickaxe, and resistance is how hard it is to destroy with an explosion. So, I'm pretty sure it's impossible to mine -1.
Enable builder mod.
Break everything
Thats hardly the point.
Lol I know. In all seriousness, bedrock can be broken by TNT, I've seen it in this video.
This may be fake, though...
but you need that all TNTs adjacents from the block you want to destroy, if you want to blast bedrock, you would need all the TNTs around the said block, with is impossible to archive.
Support my suggestion, Thanks
viewtopic.php?f=1&t=173216
MineScience - viewtopic.php?f=25&t=166560
Dragonator - viewtopic.php?f=25&t=141803
Sand Skiffs - viewtopic.php?f=25&t=233346
Exactly. There is no possible way of placing 4.5 MILLION TNT all around ONE block. And keeping it close enough to have maximum blast radius.
It's not fake. However, he didn't break bedrock either. There was a lava lake there right around level 1 or 2. Since lava lakes always have stone at the bottom, and they are generated after the bedrock, any bedrock that would normally make up the bottom of the lake gets turned into stone. It is possible to break stone.
http://pcpartpicker.com/user/SteevyT/saved/21PI
2. type "//" into the textbox
3. Use the super pick axe to mine through the bedrock
4. ???
5. Profit
http://capslock44.deviantart.com/ — I make album covers
Afaik, the only way to mine through bedrock, would be to mine it for so long you overflow the 'damage' integer, it wraps around to its ultimate negative limit, and you work your way back to -1. However, I estimate that would take somewhere between 10 and 60 years of holding down your mouse button, depending on what you were using to do it. I could be wrong about how exactly this programming is handled, but don't really care to check further into it.
That video made me cry
That joke is so old last time I heard it I fell off my dinosaur.
Thanks for reiterating what I've already said.
Also, no.
No amount of TNT will break bedrock, despite the quote from Notch. Further, bedrock cannot be broken by any amount of TNT, and huge amounts of TNT won't break it.
No amount of picking will break bedrock. Bedrock cannot be broken by an infinity of pickaxing, and using a pickaxe on it will never break it.
(The video is fake, and false to boot.)
Bedrock does not break. Breaking is a thing bedrock doesn't do, and not a thing bedrock does.
Here's a quick Venn diagram to explain it:
In short, you cannot break bedrock.
Cool. Read the code, then go look at the blast radius of TNT. Its more of a can, but you can't thing.
Read the code, and look at the blast strength of TNT. It's entirely a "TNT damage doesn't stack" thing.
Just to be clear, go back and read what I wrote, especially the part where I said, "no."
I've heard that the code allows damage stacking as long as the explosions affect a block simultaneously. Unfortunately, I can't find any videos that have even tried to demonstrate this using even obsidian. Of course, given that I'm not even sure what an individual TNT's strength is, I'm not sure how much activated TNT you would have to compress to destroy a block of obsidian.
Probably the easiest way to test if damage has any stacking capabilities is seeing if enough simultaneously activated TNT can destroy a water source (obviously, you would have to do this without allowing the TNT to become submerged, as that prevents it from damaging blocks).
lolwut. I never said TNT damage stacks, they all do different damage to the same block.