
If, for example, you need your clock to turn on during mornings and evenings as well - enable your clock when your solar panels go above 0kWt and set condition to I<22500, or any desired number. Evening and morning last for 5000 ticks each, night is 2500 ticks. For this one, you definitely want to use an SR latch. The other main one would be using a power switch to cut off the boilers from your grid, which is a little faster to start up. Wait in the morning for the solar panel just to go from 59kWt to 60kWt and turn constant combinator on - you'll have a precise clock. Theres a couple different ways to handle backup power control with the circuit network. Power it with an isolated solar panel and a battery, create two signals in a constant combinator with R=25001, I=1, and for the decider put in I

That might be the thing you want, but to be precise, a daylight sensor is an isolated circuit with a solar panel, an accumulator an a bunch of lights - each consume 5kWt, solar panel outputting 60 at peak daylight, meaning you can vary the amount of lights to pinpoint specific time when static consumption exceeds variating output during evening. You could make an SR Latch to ensure the kovarex inserter doesn't operate until there's exactly 41 left This will work if you are sure that there is never more than 42 U235 (e.g.


The problem with just wiring an accumulator is that it will shutdown during any spike in power consumption, like when an array of laser turrets going off.
