This tutorial requires completing the [wiki:tuts/CookingCauldron cooking cauldron] tutorial. = Auto-hydrating Cooking Cauldron [[Image(cooking-cauldron-piping.jpeg)]] If you've used the cooking cauldron for awhile now then you're aware of how annoying it is to keep the pot filled with water as it cooks. In this tutorial we show you how to connect the cauldron up with a water source to keep it perpetually filled with water, no more hauling water buckets! This is also a good primer to teach you how to transport water across long distances using pipes, which will be necessary for completing the steam engine assembly. For this tutorial it will be necessary to ensure one side of your cooking cauldron is accessible so that we can connect a pipe to it. Naturally this should not be the front of the cauldron where you do your cooking, otherwise the piping would get in your way. == Getting Started Requirements The first thing you need to do is either find or create a water source that is ''above'' your cooking cauldron. This is where we are going to pipe water from to your cauldron. The source must be above the cauldron because we can only rely on gravity to move the water through the piping (there are no water pumps). === Crafting Ingredients Craft the following items, this assumes you have chosen or created a water source near your cooking cauldron to connect-up with piping. We will be using copper pipes to achieve this, the recipes for copper pipes are just like the recipes for bauxite pipes but use ''copper ingots'' instead of ''bauxite clay''. Refer to [wiki:/CraftGuide#SearchforRecipes] to discover the recipes for these ingredients. 1. ''Corner copper pipe''s (as many as you think you will need) 1. ''Linear copper pipe''s (as many as you think you will need) 1. One ''copper intake funnel'' == Finishing it Up Now we're going to connect everything up, since we're working with water here we need to take extra care to prevent water from flowing everywhere while we're pipe-laying. [[Image(leaking-water-source.jpeg)]] 1. Cut out a hole at the bottom of your water source, you can take extra care in advance to contain the water that will inevitably spill out from the bottom of your water source [[Image(cover-leak-hole.jpeg)]] 2. Place the ''copper intake funnel'' in the hole you just created 2. Cover-up the top of intake funnel with a block like a bathtub plug (we will take it out later, this is just to prevent water from spilling out everywhere while we're working) 2. From the underside of the intake funnel, and using your handy ''pipe wrench'', connect copper piping to a ''side'' of your cooking cauldron 2. Remove the temporary plug we placed in step 3 = Conclusion Water mechanics using copper piping is a little strange, but it is based on the real-life water physics. You'll come to understand this more in-depth when we work on the boiler.