14

Possible Duplicate:
How can I tunnel through water?

I accidentally flooded my mine. I am yet to find sand (early part of the game).

How can I easily clear out water which is about 15 deep?

PrettyPrincessKitty FS
  • 9,413
  • 12
  • 52
  • 71
  • 2
    Am I missing something? Why not just sink to the bottom, dig a hole and drain it into a mine below? This is what I've always done, and doesn't require you to fill the entire area (!?!) with dirt... – BlueRaja - Danny Pflughoeft Jul 03 '11 at 10:19
  • Why not use that water as part of your hell-i-vator, to prevent you from dying on the impact of reaching the bottom? – rlb.usa Dec 05 '11 at 22:25

3 Answers3

12

Edit 2: This does still work, but you will have to log out after placing the solid blocks. When you log back in the game will not have remembered there was water there. This has only been tested in single player.

Edit:
The following no longer works as of 1.1.

LEGACY ANSWER:
If you place a block on an area covered with water, the water in that spot will be destroyed. You can eliminate the water by simply filling the pool with dirt or stone squares (you don't need sand) and then mining them back out again.

user57209
  • 3
  • 2
Raven Dreamer
  • 171,485
  • 137
  • 675
  • 963
  • 2
    Same goes for lava, I think. If not with any block, I know for sure that it works with Ash. – Ragnar Jun 09 '11 at 17:08
  • 2
    Works with lava too. You can actually build a tunnel vertically down INTO lava without ever getting burned, just by placing two layers of blocks, mining the top layer, and repeating. – lilserf Jun 09 '11 at 17:10
  • 1
    Great video on handling lava (water works the same) and actually shows the mechanic of digging through lava: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WMAUe89u_RQ – Robb Jun 09 '11 at 17:12
  • 3 Players working together can dig straight down without pausing - 2 laying stone/dirt below, 1 digging out the vertical channel. :) – lilserf Jun 09 '11 at 18:35
  • but sand both removes water when being placed and when falling, so when you place a comumn of sand and mine it again, a significantly larger amount of water is drained than when using e.g. dirt. – flying sheep Jun 12 '11 at 17:44
  • @Raven Dreamer — This method no longer works as of version 1.1. – Ben Blank Dec 05 '11 at 15:28
  • @BenBlank oh? What happens? The water remains in place behind the block? – Raven Dreamer Dec 05 '11 at 16:32
  • @Raven Dreamer — And pours out again when you mine it, yes. :-) – Ben Blank Dec 05 '11 at 16:40
  • @BenBlank bummer! I've updated my answer, but the OP is going to have to pick a new accepted answer. – Raven Dreamer Dec 05 '11 at 18:58
  • Yes this is actually very sad that it also stopped working for lava. Now you need water and only water to destroy lava, sand is not working anymore. – Teo.sk Dec 09 '11 at 16:00
4

To drain huge amounts of water fast, drop down a Hellforge in a 3 wide, 2 high box under all the water. The Hellforge will prevent the lava from turning into obsidian when it comes in contact with water, but it will still evaporate the water. When building this evaporator unit, start with a 5 wide, 4 high box full of dirt. Then, hollow it out, and fill it with 6 buckets of lava. Then, drop in the Hellforge and open up the top. The result should look something like the graphic below.

WWWWW
DHHHD
DHHHD
DDDDD

W = your huge water volume
D = dirt, or whatever solid block you want  
H = Hellforge, flooded in lava  
a cat
  • 25,880
  • 31
  • 154
  • 189
JoerT
  • 41
  • 1
3

If you don't have a grappling hook or other way to pull yourself out of the water for breath periodically, the easiest thing to do is probably to dig a parallel tunnel somewhere, until you can get UNDER your mine at the lowest point. Then dig someplace for the water to drain, then connect it to the mine and you should be clear.

Annoying, but easier than running out of breath trying to mine slowly underwater.

lilserf
  • 6,697
  • 5
  • 36
  • 55