


To lessen the chance of wasting voxels - and thus ingots - it is necessary to add one ingot, flatten it out and only then add the next - and so forth. This process might be easier when starting with one iron plate as the base, and then adding 3 more ingots, one at a time. Note that for the base, a total of 5 ingots need to be added, and there is at maximum 14 voxels worth room for error. Select the anvil base and start hammering. Start the crafting process by placing a heated iron ingot on the anvil - bronze or higher anvil tier is needed. Protip: The recipe has an upper height limit of voxels, which means adding too many ingots too fast without first distributing previously placed voxels might effectively delete voxels altogether! Make sure to add the next ingot only after distributing the voxels from the last one. One ingot amounts to 42 voxels added, and the anvil base and top need 196 and 210 voxels respectively. To make a complete iron anvil, a total of 10 iron ingots are needed, 5 each for the anvil base and anvil top, as well as one powdered borax. Then, the two parts need to be welded together with powdered borax. The player first has to make the upper and lower part of the anvil separately, smithing them with a hammer on a bronze anvil. An iron anvil base with applied borax waiting for the top part.Īnvils made out of iron or meteoric iron can not be cast like copper and bronze anvils since iron and meteoric iron cannot be melted in a crucible.
