I’ve been playing MC since 2010 and know generally all the basic redstone mechanics but still learned a few things, like I completely forgot about the repeater locking feature
Alpha released in early 2010 I believe, first version of beta also came out in 2010, I’ve had the game since Alpha 1.2.6. Official game released in Nov 2011, but the game was available for purchase well before
@@Guest24567 that was the 'official' realese. People have been playing minecraft since 2009 when it was still early access. Like how fortnite was in 'early access' for 3 years until it officially released in 2020
@@Wenmo85 remember the part where he says red stone dust directly behind a piston won’t power it? It’s because the red stone isn’t connected to the piston, or in more professional terms, the piston does not redirect the red stone. But then, the target block will redirect red stone dust, which is why you see it in a lot of red stone builds, and ironically, isn’t used the most for its target function.
@@Wenmo85 A target block is a block that forces redstone to connect to it. You can tell wether a redstone line will power someting next to it based on where the dust is pointing. A target block will always make a dust line point towards it so the target block can get powered. Its generally usefull when you working with limited spaces. I should note that other redstone blocks do this, also. Such as repeaters, comparators, and redstone torches. But the target block is the only solid block that has this behavior.
Please make more videos like this, I've been playing for years, even building a lot of different farms, but I still strugge a lot when it comes to redstone components, this was really useful!
Been playing Minecraft for almost 9 years, never took the time to look deeper into the mechanics of redstone and I’m impressed. I automatically got a ton of ideas to do.
If you place a comparator next to a skulk sensor, the signal strength will correspond to what kind of sound was made (eating, walking, piston, breaking a block, etc) instead of how close the sound is to it
I learned many things from you In which time I started to play minecraft in 2020 but I did not know about many things you explained in this helpful video
Thank you for this video!!! I have used several redstone builds for my worlds that ive seen on youtube without knowing how or why there working which made it hard to fix if broken! So glad I found this video. Now i can design and build my own builds!!! Again thanks so much!!!
I know a lot of redstone and I just want to add "a few" things that wasn't said in the video. -Redstone dust --You can transmit signals through edges of a lot more blocks than just slabs and glass, every block that isn't a full block can do this. -Redstone torches --Redstone torches can be burnt out if you power and un-power them many times quickly. --You can put redstone torches on the side of blocks. --If you put a redstone torch on the side of a block it will not power the block it sits on. -Pistons --In java edition you can't use a lever or a button on the side of a piston without it popping off but in bedrock edition you can use it without the button/lever popping off. --In java edition only pistons has a thing called quasi-connectivity which makes the piston get budded (gets powered without it extending), it is created when you send a redstone signal to the block above the piston (like if the piston was a door), to get the piston to extend you will need to update it, you can do this by placing a block next to the piston, playing a noteblock next to it or just activating any redstone item next to it. This can be really fun to play around with as it can create extended piston that aren't even powered. -Sticky pistons --In java edition only you can 0-tick sticky pistons which will make the block in front of the piston get teleported forward instead of taking time to extend, the sticky piston will also act like a normal piston meaning the block will not stick to the sticky piston anymore. This can be used to create super fast piston feed tapes or instant block pushers. To do this you just need to send a 1-tick pulse like an observer output. -Hoppers (--You literally skipped the main mechanic with hoppers.) --The hopper can be used to output or input items from any block with storage. -Droppers/dispensers --You can actually activate 11 droppers at the same time with one lever/button, same thing goes with dispensers (I'm not gonna explain how you do it, it would be too long). -Lecterns --When you have a comparator next to a lectern it doesn't give of a 1 to 1 redstone signal depending on the page, it actually has a complicated formula to know what signal it should give out, Signal=⌊1+14(P-1)/M-1⌋, P = the page your on, M = the amount of pages in the book. In bedrock edition this is not the same but I'm not gonna explain that as it is more complicated, just read the wiki minecraft.fandom.com/wiki/Lectern#Redstone_signal. -Target blocks --If redstone dust is next to a target block it will automatically connect to the target block. This can be used to make more compact redstone machine as many blocks don't get redstone auto directed to them. -Daylight detectors --The signal strength it gives out is dependent on the time of the day/night. It doesn't only give a signal of strength 15 or 0. -Sculk sensors --When you send a vibration to the sculk sensor the time it takes for the vibration to get to the sculk sensor the 2 blocks per redstone tick (1/10 second). -String --You didn't put this as a redstone block in the video but I would say that it is. You can detect if an entity is on the string with an observer. This can be useful to make more compact player detecters than using tripwire hooks or to make an entity detector that doesn't make any sound. This took over an hour, hopefully you learned something and thank you Shulkercraft for making me waste so much time.
I forgot about the jukebox which can output a signal with strength dependent on which disc you play. (I'm not gonna edit the comment as I don't want it to say "edited" with a comment this long)
You can also use leaves, a detector, piston and a log to transmit a signal. The leaves get a state update when they are next to a log or connected to a log through a chain of leaves. Use a detector to pick up the state change of the leaves as a piston pushes a log against the leaves or pulls it away.
@@thelawngnomeslayer I know but I wouldn’t count it as a redstone block as it’s mostly used for decoration and not very often used for transmitting signals as other blocks can do the same thing but even better
Fun fact: Theres an unit called tps (ticks per second). 1 second is roughly about 20 ticks. In a tick, Minecraft displays a new frame, checks events, etc. But if somehow more checks have to be made (i.e lag machines, huge number of entities, etc), Minecraft will take much more time to run. TPS will be brought down. And as a result, the game will be increasingly laggier and eventually unplayable
Thank you so much for this video! I've been so confused about redstone for so long and now I finally know the basics! Maybe now I can understand the farms I've been making from y'all lol
Nice video. It will definitely help many players to design complex redstone machine which they usually copy from others. They can design by themselves.
@@Oliver-ex1if they always confused me, especially because I don't do redstone much. The last time I used redstone was 2 years ago when I made a 2x2 poston door on our server.
THANK YOU FOR MAKING THIS. Seriously I've been playing MC since just before the Horse Update and redstone has never made sense to me. I'll be sure to share this with all my equally redstone-inept friends. 🤣
I did a mistake of building 2 huge glass stairs, each about 80 blocks long, for a massive project. There were 2, cause i needed 1 to go up, and the other to go down. I put so much time in theese, putting countless repeators in both, that i was almost willing to give up, when i found out you can't transfer a signal up. I broke both stairs, because they were huge, and looked quite ugly, so to transfer a signal down, i used stone brick walls and observers, and to send a signal up, i used leaves, sticky piston with a wooden log, and observers. Works super well, and is faster that the stairs could ever be!
Redstone blocks Redstone dust,redstone repeater,lectern,comparator, Target,lever,skulk sensor,trap chest,dispenser,sticky piston,piston,dropper,plates,doors,trap doors,honey,slime,redstone block,hopper,observer,note block,tripwire hook,tnt,lantern block,TNT,bottons, daylight sensor.(this is for the ones who are just starting the video and will know the items quick)
Please make more complex video, I didnt know many facts before watching this like note block protuct redstone(i used observerst to do secret places) and hopper facts(that is why i never build sorter)
Some explanations in this are just wrong. If the observer gave a 1gt pulse, the piston would instantly extend. With a sticky piston, the block it pushes also teleports. The observer gives a 2gt pulse, which is .1 seconds, or one redstone tick, and the same goes for the lectern without a comparator. Pistons don't only spit out their blocks with an observer. If you give a sticky piston a pulse with a length of .1 seconds or shorter, it will leave the block in front of it behind when retracting. I believe this happens because the block doesn't have enough time to re- "materialize" from being an entity to be pulled back. How that works with 1gt pulses and 0gt pulses, (which do exist) i have no idea. Quasi Connectivity isn't touched on for pistons and droppers/dispensers either Also, Targer block in the description.
Can't expect everyone to get everything right. Tip for the redstoners. once u know what u want, start building a contraption, then make it more compact, if u do know what u want but don't know how to get it, use google, then boom. done
@@danbaker8376 that mistake is quite bad though. they probably looked for info on google as well, so i have no idea how they messed this up I make redstone things myself actually
another thing I wanna mention is that this is explaining java redstone, like how he explains that pistons don't redirect redstone wire or what the observer can detect. Quasi Connectivity is a core element of java, so that not being explained at all is quite weird
@@Dummigame Agreed these explanations are really surface level. Left out like half the usecases of the sulk sensor. didn't mention that targetblocks redirect redstone, which imo is its main use. QC was almost mentionned, when they said power the piston above, but then didn't explain at all why that would do the trick
you missed one of the key parts of target blocks. it’s not only an actual target, it redirects red stone dust to point in it. going back to the redstone example with the pistons, and how you can power it from the side, the target block can redirect the redstone to power the pistons.
Ok, not trying to hate but as a redstoner this is missing some BIG points for example quasi connectivity and redirecting redstone with the target block. Other than that good video
im playing this game for so long and know almost everything about redstone and im good with it but I still learned some things like pressure plates and comparator subtracting
That takes me back to when i started getting interest in minecraft. I didn't really like the game but wanted to learn how to use redstone. Now. 6 years into minecraft... i know NOTHING about redstone... :D
As a redstone nerd, I'm glad, that this video didn't teach me anything new; but I think, you forgot the target block, which is a life saver often times; making everything more compact
You missed ob sculk catalist (its important because comparater can detect how musc XP death mob dropt, and same like tnt, also the sculk shrieker and jucebox can be activated with redstone.
I’ve been playing MC since 2010 and know generally all the basic redstone mechanics but still learned a few things, like I completely forgot about the repeater locking feature
But as my knowledge minecraft was released at 2011 18 November
@@Guest24567 Bohot Hard Bro
Alpha released in early 2010 I believe, first version of beta also came out in 2010, I’ve had the game since Alpha 1.2.6. Official game released in Nov 2011, but the game was available for purchase well before
@@Guest24567 that was the 'official' realese. People have been playing minecraft since 2009 when it was still early access. Like how fortnite was in 'early access' for 3 years until it officially released in 2020
This is a underrated mechanic
Timestamps:
0:10 Redstone dust
0:43 Redstone torch
1:00 Redstone block
1:14 Repeater
1:59 Comparator
3:42 Piston
4:15 Sticky piston
4:29 Slime block
4:46 Honey block
5:05 Observer
5:27 Hopper
5:39 Dropper
5:53 Dispenser
6:06 Lectern
6:26 Target block
6:36 Lever
6:43 Lightning Rod
6:50 Daylight detector
7:01 Sculk sensor
7:35 Tripwire hook
7:57 Trapped chest
8:11 TNT
8:19 Redstone lamp
8:24 Noteblock
8:44 Stone button
8:53 Oak button
9:04 Gold pressure plate
9:25 Iron pressure plate
9:51 Oak pressure plate
10:03 Stone pressure plate
10:12 OUTRO
PLEASE LIKE SO ANYONE CAN SEE THIS HOPE IT HELPS!
Nice
THANK YOU
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤😂❤😂😂😂😂😂😂🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉cngssdshhncag
3:01 substract not devide
Nice video
The target block is also a block that attaches to redstone_wire (for example to power a piston nearby)
Salamat sa koreksyon.
I didnt understabd the target block part, can you explain?
Maths bro they're hard
@@Wenmo85 remember the part where he says red stone dust directly behind a piston won’t power it? It’s because the red stone isn’t connected to the piston, or in more professional terms, the piston does not redirect the red stone. But then, the target block will redirect red stone dust, which is why you see it in a lot of red stone builds, and ironically, isn’t used the most for its target function.
@@Wenmo85 A target block is a block that forces redstone to connect to it. You can tell wether a redstone line will power someting next to it based on where the dust is pointing. A target block will always make a dust line point towards it so the target block can get powered. Its generally usefull when you working with limited spaces. I should note that other redstone blocks do this, also. Such as repeaters, comparators, and redstone torches. But the target block is the only solid block that has this behavior.
Please make more videos like this, I've been playing for years, even building a lot of different farms, but I still strugge a lot when it comes to redstone components, this was really useful!
Been playing Minecraft for almost 9 years, never took the time to look deeper into the mechanics of redstone and I’m impressed. I automatically got a ton of ideas to do.
Redstone is like Tecnological engineering in real life and this video is like a college teaching me . Dont forget to mention Professor Larixd
@Louis House 👇💜 disgusting
@Louis House 👇💜 probably a scam site
Something very important for the target block: it is a solid block that can divert redstone into itself
I feel like for most redstone people that is its main use hahah
I've wanted a decent explaination of redstone for a long time... this is perfect! Thank you.
Thank you for doing hard work for us! Keep up the good work!! (Greetings from Estonia)
ma olen kaa eestist(i am too from estonia)
something we didnt know we needed but want
But many people already knew everything like me.
The fact that a juke box can also be used is hilarious 😂
10:17 YES!.. please. I didn’t even know that double piston was possible 😅😅
I was really confused about somethings like glass, target block, etc... Perfect timeing
Very good video as always, thanks Shulkercraft !Do you have any suggestions for redstone basic to master series ?😄💥✨
@Louis House 👇💜 bots have gotten weird
@@jack-kg7vk yep.....
@@jack-kg7vk true
If you place a comparator next to a skulk sensor, the signal strength will correspond to what kind of sound was made (eating, walking, piston, breaking a block, etc) instead of how close the sound is to it
This is good for a newbie- I haven't played Minecraft 1.19 in a while so I don't know the new features
Pov : ur trying to find a comment saying can we appreciate the amount of work they put in their vids
lol
wow thanks for the tips now i can make my redstone farms
Sticky pistons are actually more different to normal pistons than you said in the video. It is slower
i would only add that the target block can also redirect redstone lines into it, and it acts like a solid block when powered
Actually very useful tips, I’ve been trying to work red stone out myself without using tutorials so this will definitely hell
i just realized how sophisticated the redstone mechanism is
I learned many things from you
In which time I started to play minecraft in 2020 but I did not know about many things you explained in this helpful video
Thank you I needed this
Thank you for this video!!! I have used several redstone builds for my worlds that ive seen on youtube without knowing how or why there working which made it hard to fix if broken!
So glad I found this video. Now i can design and build my own builds!!! Again thanks so much!!!
I know a lot of redstone and I just want to add "a few" things that wasn't said in the video.
-Redstone dust
--You can transmit signals through edges of a lot more blocks than just slabs and glass, every block that isn't a full block can do this.
-Redstone torches
--Redstone torches can be burnt out if you power and un-power them many times quickly.
--You can put redstone torches on the side of blocks.
--If you put a redstone torch on the side of a block it will not power the block it sits on.
-Pistons
--In java edition you can't use a lever or a button on the side of a piston without it popping off but in bedrock edition you can use it without the button/lever popping off.
--In java edition only pistons has a thing called quasi-connectivity which makes the piston get budded (gets powered without it extending), it is created when you send a redstone signal to the block above the piston (like if the piston was a door), to get the piston to extend you will need to update it, you can do this by placing a block next to the piston, playing a noteblock next to it or just activating any redstone item next to it. This can be really fun to play around with as it can create extended piston that aren't even powered.
-Sticky pistons
--In java edition only you can 0-tick sticky pistons which will make the block in front of the piston get teleported forward instead of taking time to extend, the sticky piston will also act like a normal piston meaning the block will not stick to the sticky piston anymore. This can be used to create super fast piston feed tapes or instant block pushers. To do this you just need to send a 1-tick pulse like an observer output.
-Hoppers
(--You literally skipped the main mechanic with hoppers.)
--The hopper can be used to output or input items from any block with storage.
-Droppers/dispensers
--You can actually activate 11 droppers at the same time with one lever/button, same thing goes with dispensers (I'm not gonna explain how you do it, it would be too long).
-Lecterns
--When you have a comparator next to a lectern it doesn't give of a 1 to 1 redstone signal depending on the page, it actually has a complicated formula to know what signal it should give out, Signal=⌊1+14(P-1)/M-1⌋, P = the page your on, M = the amount of pages in the book. In bedrock edition this is not the same but I'm not gonna explain that as it is more complicated, just read the wiki minecraft.fandom.com/wiki/Lectern#Redstone_signal.
-Target blocks
--If redstone dust is next to a target block it will automatically connect to the target block. This can be used to make more compact redstone machine as many blocks don't get redstone auto directed to them.
-Daylight detectors
--The signal strength it gives out is dependent on the time of the day/night. It doesn't only give a signal of strength 15 or 0.
-Sculk sensors
--When you send a vibration to the sculk sensor the time it takes for the vibration to get to the sculk sensor the 2 blocks per redstone tick (1/10 second).
-String
--You didn't put this as a redstone block in the video but I would say that it is. You can detect if an entity is on the string with an observer. This can be useful to make more compact player detecters than using tripwire hooks or to make an entity detector that doesn't make any sound.
This took over an hour, hopefully you learned something and thank you Shulkercraft for making me waste so much time.
Please pin
I forgot about the jukebox which can output a signal with strength dependent on which disc you play. (I'm not gonna edit the comment as I don't want it to say "edited" with a comment this long)
You can also use leaves, a detector, piston and a log to transmit a signal. The leaves get a state update when they are next to a log or connected to a log through a chain of leaves. Use a detector to pick up the state change of the leaves as a piston pushes a log against the leaves or pulls it away.
@@thelawngnomeslayer I know but I wouldn’t count it as a redstone block as it’s mostly used for decoration and not very often used for transmitting signals as other blocks can do the same thing but even better
Please make a video on more components, circuits, and logic gates
Thank you after this vid i made a nasa comuputer in minecraft that can play minecraft
Fun fact: Theres an unit called tps (ticks per second). 1 second is roughly about 20 ticks. In a tick, Minecraft displays a new frame, checks events, etc. But if somehow more checks have to be made (i.e lag machines, huge number of entities, etc), Minecraft will take much more time to run. TPS will be brought down. And as a result, the game will be increasingly laggier and eventually unplayable
Very useful video, much appreciated.
the most complicated block that is obtainable in survival is comparitors
Definitely need more red stone videos
Great video!
Thank you so much i thought i was a redstone expert but had no idea about a couple of these things so thank you ❤
This will help people a lot, thanks a lot as always, shulkercraft :)
Nice video very helpful
Great video! The only thing I would add is that the target block can also be used to redirect redstone dust.
Thank you so much for this video! I've been so confused about redstone for so long and now I finally know the basics! Maybe now I can understand the farms I've been making from y'all lol
finally, somone explains what the comparator does.
Thank you so much Shulkercraft
2:57 It will not "divide from" but "subtract from".
Otherwise nice video, good explanations!
When he then showed with an example on how it worked he said subtraction.
@@Oliver-ex1if
I know. But initially he got it wrong...
you can shear the string = the tripewhirehook gives no redstone signal
I needed this information. Thanks shulker
Nice video. It will definitely help many players to design complex redstone machine which they usually copy from others. They can design by themselves.
Thanks for giving how Redstone work
Honestly.. even a new Minecraft player can be a redstone expert after watching this video.
I've been playing MC for nearly 8 years now and I finally learned how comparator works. Cool
How is comparators so hard to understand
@@Oliver-ex1if they always confused me, especially because I don't do redstone much. The last time I used redstone was 2 years ago when I made a 2x2 poston door on our server.
@@Sebixo F3 says what the comparator does when you hover over it. F3 can also help with a bunch of other things too.
THANK YOU FOR MAKING THIS. Seriously I've been playing MC since just before the Horse Update and redstone has never made sense to me. I'll be sure to share this with all my equally redstone-inept friends. 🤣
I did a mistake of building 2 huge glass stairs, each about 80 blocks long, for a massive project. There were 2, cause i needed 1 to go up, and the other to go down. I put so much time in theese, putting countless repeators in both, that i was almost willing to give up, when i found out you can't transfer a signal up. I broke both stairs, because they were huge, and looked quite ugly, so to transfer a signal down, i used stone brick walls and observers, and to send a signal up, i used leaves, sticky piston with a wooden log, and observers. Works super well, and is faster that the stairs could ever be!
Redstone blocks
Redstone dust,redstone repeater,lectern,comparator, Target,lever,skulk sensor,trap chest,dispenser,sticky piston,piston,dropper,plates,doors,trap doors,honey,slime,redstone block,hopper,observer,note block,tripwire hook,tnt,lantern block,TNT,bottons, daylight sensor.(this is for the ones who are just starting the video and will know the items quick)
You could probably make a whole video on just the different functions of combining a comparater and sculk sensor
Thanks, I finally found out how comparator works
Me too
I scream internally in bedrock edition knowing half of these items work differently than in the video
then don’t play bedrock edition shit
Plz continues this series
please make more vids abaout redstone i love it!
Please make more complex video, I didnt know many facts before watching this like note block protuct redstone(i used observerst to do secret places) and hopper facts(that is why i never build sorter)
Some explanations in this are just wrong. If the observer gave a 1gt pulse, the piston would instantly extend.
With a sticky piston, the block it pushes also teleports.
The observer gives a 2gt pulse, which is .1 seconds, or one redstone tick, and the same goes for the lectern without a comparator.
Pistons don't only spit out their blocks with an observer. If you give a sticky piston a pulse with a length of .1 seconds or shorter, it will leave the block in front of it behind when retracting. I believe this happens because the block doesn't have enough time to re- "materialize" from being an entity to be pulled back. How that works with 1gt pulses and 0gt pulses, (which do exist) i have no idea.
Quasi Connectivity isn't touched on for pistons and droppers/dispensers either
Also, Targer block in the description.
Can't expect everyone to get everything right.
Tip for the redstoners. once u know what u want, start building a contraption, then make it more compact, if u do know what u want but don't know how to get it, use google, then boom. done
@@danbaker8376 that mistake is quite bad though. they probably looked for info on google as well, so i have no idea how they messed this up
I make redstone things myself actually
another thing I wanna mention is that this is explaining java redstone, like how he explains that pistons don't redirect redstone wire or what the observer can detect.
Quasi Connectivity is a core element of java, so that not being explained at all is quite weird
@@Dummigame Agreed these explanations are really surface level. Left out like half the usecases of the sulk sensor. didn't mention that targetblocks redirect redstone, which imo is its main use.
QC was almost mentionned, when they said power the piston above, but then didn't explain at all why that would do the trick
@@lukasmiller8531 they say the blocks get powered, activating the pistons
Nice redstone 😎👍
you missed one of the key parts of target blocks. it’s not only an actual target, it redirects red stone dust to point in it. going back to the redstone example with the pistons, and how you can power it from the side, the target block can redirect the redstone to power the pistons.
Ok, not trying to hate but as a redstoner this is missing some BIG points for example quasi connectivity and redirecting redstone with the target block. Other than that good video
Look at the intro. He mentioned "basic"
Yup, maybe he's doing a very basic redstone guide...
Can we appreciate the amount of work they put into their videos
Ikr
im playing this game for so long and know almost everything about redstone and im good with it but I still learned some things like pressure plates and comparator subtracting
Thanks as a beginner redstone blew my mind but you made all the item functions very clear. Keep up the good work
That takes me back to when i started getting interest in minecraft. I didn't really like the game but wanted to learn how to use redstone.
Now. 6 years into minecraft... i know NOTHING about redstone... :D
this is like best video we all wanted
This was an awesome video. Not even just for new players.
Thank you i really wanted this
We really needed this video.
As a redstone nerd, I'm glad, that this video didn't teach me anything new; but I think, you forgot the target block, which is a life saver often times; making everything more compact
Yes please give more redstone guide
I would be cool If Mojang will add a feature where redstone dust can be placed under a slab
Thanks for this video its cool idea to help all people who don't know how to use redstone!
Really needed this video
You missed ob sculk catalist (its important because comparater can detect how musc XP death mob dropt, and same like tnt, also the sculk shrieker and jucebox can be activated with redstone.
Finally somebody explained comparators to me
Thank you so much for explaining all this it will make things much easier for all Minecraft players. 🙏🙏
oo new shulkercraft vid
Thanks!
Do advanced redstone usage nex vid
Woooow too much things to learn for my little brain but thank you im sure i will need it at some point ;)
There is a guy that explained Redstone components in one minute
i playing MC 7 years and I don't know some stuffs with Redstone but with this video I know all
Please make a tutorial on a chunk loader, it would really help
We need more redstone videos like this TwT
Bro, cheers for the content, hopefully 1 JT subscribe
Was waiting for this video for ao long
Very useful video Thankyou
another great video and I would love to know further about them maybe combination of different redstone items of some sorts
0:36 I consider myself good with redstone but I had no idea this was a thing!
I've learned way more about redstone than watching mumbo-jumbo
Oh hell yeah this is what we all were looking for
Nice very informative❤ thank you so much
Me: I watched Shulkercraft's Redstone Component Explained video.
Shulkercraft: so you know how, it works?
Me:
Shulkercraft: so you know how, it works?
!:50 i didn't know redstone repeater can be locked thanks for this info
Thanks
yes we need part 2 of it
This has been so useful video
Thank you for all this info I will probably never use. At least I know what the fudge a comparator does.
Sir can you please explain the detector rail aswell
Pressure plate for rails
Dude I thought shulkercraft had a lot more subs they make great content