4. Connect with Redstone Now you need to connect the dispenser to the tripwire hook with redstone. Select the redstone in your hot bar and place the redstone on any blocks separating the dispenser from the tripwire hook. This will make a trail of redstone wire. In this example, we pla...
Be sure to place redstone dust on top of the stone blocks to connect the top two dispensers to the pressure plate: 4. Add an Armor Item to each Dispenser Now you can add an armor item to each of the dispensers. The order that you add the armor to the dispensers doesn't matter. Th...
The only things I've found so far are a cart method (which ceased working in 1.6), a dispenser method (utilizing the decay on dropped items, but this requires occasional feeding), and a binary counter (which won't work for a single input but rather a fluctuating one). I want to have...
So, for the sake of my framerate I will stick to a simple design. From this you can get a hold of the basics and then expand on it if you wish, using more complex Redstone circuiting. For this design you will need: 2 Sticky Pistons 2 Slime Blocks 1 Dispenser 2 Redstone Repeaters...
5 Stone blocks (or any other building blocks) 2 Slabs A Dispenser A Chest 4 Glass blocks A Hopper A Redstone Comparator 1 Bee Nest 2 Bees Bottles for Honey or Shears for Honeycomb How to Find Bees in Minecraft As you might have guessed, the most critical aspect of our farm is bees....
AntVenom, a YouTuber, recently found an ingenious method to use a dispenser to make pulsing power for redstone mechanisms. This contraption is useful, as it can limit the number of pulses sent. It can also just be for handing out items in...
Three redstone dust One dispenser A stack (64) of your preferred mob spawn egg (you can add two or more stacks if you want to randomize your spawner) 3 Place your dispenser on the ground. Select the dispenser in your equip bar, then select the ground location in which you want to ...