stal447
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| Joined: 15 Jun 2009 |
| Total Posts: 10640 |
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| 11 Nov 2014 10:13 PM |
Wow, that is weird.
The sword is the adversary of the world; it's power is outright. |
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stal447
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| Joined: 15 Jun 2009 |
| Total Posts: 10640 |
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royaltoe
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| Joined: 14 Sep 2011 |
| Total Posts: 36834 |
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| 11 Nov 2014 10:16 PM |
| It could be that you either have ice floor or your bricks are arranged in small parts where it makes you slip. I don't think this is a solution but it's worth trying, put a transparent brick about 1 stud above the floor. |
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| 11 Nov 2014 10:16 PM |
Theres no rule anywhere on this forum saying that every post you post has to help anyone. There is also a little thing called freedom of speech.
The sword is the adversary of the world; it's power is outright. |
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stal447
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| Joined: 15 Jun 2009 |
| Total Posts: 10640 |
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| 11 Nov 2014 10:19 PM |
| Found the problem. I compared it to a normal brick. The normal brick had 0.3 friction, and mine had 0 friction. Thanks anyways for the help! |
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| 11 Nov 2014 11:59 PM |
| 1 stud? ...... no.. 0.001 stud |
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GregTame
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| Joined: 10 Dec 2009 |
| Total Posts: 226 |
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| 12 Nov 2014 04:16 AM |
Okay, here is what you do. A: Make sure the friction is decent. B: make sure the part velocity is set to 0
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| 12 Nov 2014 08:28 AM |
Lol.
0 Friction = LOTS OF FUN WITH CARS!!! |
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