How to Fill the Rift with Liquid Xiranite in Arknights Endfield
This guide walks you through everything you need to know to fill the rift with Liquid Xiranite in Arknights Endfield. Whether you’re building your first compact grout loop or scaling to a full factory that keeps fissures sealed indefinitely, you’ll find practical layouts, resource balancing strategies, troubleshooting checklists, and optimization tactics that work in live play. Expect clear, original explanations, visualizable blueprints you can adapt to your base, and a focus on automation so you can stop babysitting and start sealing.
You’ll learn how to:
Produce Liquid Xiranite reliably.
Feed a Filling Unit with empty Ferrium Bottles and fluid input.
Route filled bottles to grouting stations or storage.
Scale throughput without breaking your supply chains.
Diagnose and fix the most common stoppages.
Throughout the guide I’ll highlight bold and italicized keywords so you can quickly scan for the most important concepts.
Core concepts: what Liquid Xiranite is and why it matters
Liquid Xiranite is the grout material used to seal fissures and stabilize land in Arknights Endfield. Mechanically it’s a fluid product created by combining processed Xiranite with Water in a Reactor Crucible. The resulting fluid must be transferred into Filling Units that consume empty Ferrium Bottles to produce grout-ready containers. Those containers are then used at fissure sites or stored for later use.
Key takeaways:
Xiranite production is the upstream bottleneck for grout operations.
The Reactor Crucible is the synthesis hub; its placement and recipe selection determine flow reliability.
The Filling Unit is the consumer; it needs a steady supply of both fluid and empty bottles.
Automation and buffering are the difference between occasional grouting and continuous fissure sealing.
Understanding these relationships is the first step to designing a system that won’t stall when a fissure opens.
Machines and materials explained
Forge of the Sky The Forge converts base inputs into solid Xiranite or precursor materials. It’s the primary source of the solid feedstock that the Reactor Crucible consumes. Prioritize enough Forge capacity to match your crucible count.
Reactor Crucible This machine combines solid Xiranite and Water to produce Liquid Xiranite. It outputs fluid that must be piped into a Filling Unit or a short buffer tank. Crucible throughput is fixed per cycle; scale by adding crucibles or increasing upstream supply.
Filling Unit Consumes empty Ferrium Bottles and a fluid input to produce filled grout bottles. It has separate inputs for bottles and fluids; both must be satisfied for continuous operation. The filler’s output should feed a Protocol Stash or conveyor to the grouting site.
Molding / Bottle Production Empty bottles are produced via molding lines fed by refined Ferrium. If bottle supply lags, the Filling Unit will idle even if fluid is abundant.
Conveyors and Pipes Conveyors move solids and bottles; pipes move fluids. Pipe directionality and conveyor buffering are critical—misaligned arrows or full conveyors are the most common causes of stoppage.
Buffers and Protocol Stashes Small buffers between stages (conveyor loops, short storage chests) absorb production spikes and prevent upstream machines from stalling when downstream demand fluctuates.
High-level system designs and when to use them
Below are three practical approaches depending on your base size and goals.
Compact automated loop Best for small bases or early-mid game. Uses one Forge, one Reactor Crucible, one Filling Unit, and a single molding line. Add a small buffer chest after the filler. Pros: low footprint, easy to maintain. Cons: limited throughput; fissure-heavy sessions may exhaust supply.
Balanced mid-tier factory Two Forges, two Crucibles, two Filling Units, and parallel bottle lines. Add a short conveyor buffer and a medium Protocol Stash. Pros: reliable continuous operation for most play sessions. Cons: moderate space and resource cost.
Full-scale production complex Multiple Forges feeding a bank of Crucibles, several Filling Units, and multiple molding lines with automated distribution. Use splitters and priority routing to keep critical lines fed. Pros: near-unlimited throughput. Cons: high complexity and resource overhead.
Practical layout blueprint for a compact loop
This compact blueprint is designed to fit into a small base while delivering steady grout production.
Placement and flow (visualize left to right):
Forge of the Sky → output conveyor → Solid Xiranite buffer chest → conveyor → Reactor Crucible (placed so its fluid output faces right)
Molding line (Ferrium input → Molder → Conveyor) → Filling Unit (bottle input from above, fluid input from left) → Protocol Stash (output)
Design notes:
Keep the Reactor Crucible one tile away from the Filling Unit so the fluid arrow points directly into the filler’s fluid intake.
Place a small chest between Forge and Crucible to store 10–20 solid Xiranite units as a buffer.
Use a short conveyor loop between Molder and Filler to decouple molding spikes from filler demand.
Operational tips:
Set the crucible recipe explicitly to Liquid Xiranite.
Confirm pipe arrows after placement; rotate pipes until arrows show flow into the filler.
If the filler idles, check bottle supply first, then fluid flow, then crucible recipe.
Scaling up: how to expand without breaking the chain
When you add more crucibles or fillers, the upstream supply must scale proportionally. Follow these rules of thumb:
For each additional Reactor Crucible, add at least one Forge or increase Forge cycle speed via upgrades.
For each additional Filling Unit, add a parallel molding line or upgrade molding throughput.
Add buffer chests at key junctions: after Forge, after Molder, and after Filler. Buffers smooth out production and reduce micro-management.
Use splitters and priority belts to route resources to the most critical machines first (e.g., route stabilized carbon to Forges before other consumers).
Throughput balancing table
| Component | Baseline units | Add per extra Crucible | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Forge of the Sky | 1 | +1 per crucible | Solid Xiranite supply |
| Reactor Crucible | 1 | +1 | Fluid production scales linearly |
| Filling Unit | 1 | +1 per crucible if high demand | Prevents filler bottleneck |
| Molding line | 1 | +1 per filler | Keeps bottles stocked |
| Buffer chests | 3 | +1 at key junctions | Smooths spikes and prevents stalls |
Resource management and micro-optimizations
Stabilized Carbon and plant loops Stabilized Carbon is often produced from plant materials. Keep planting cycles staggered so harvests don’t coincide and flood your refineries. A staggered planting schedule reduces idle time for shredders and grinders.
Water routing Water is a shared resource. If your base uses water for other processes, prioritize crucible supply by using dedicated water pipes or a small water tank buffer. A one- or two-tile water buffer near crucibles prevents short-term shortages.
Bottle economy Empty Ferrium Bottles are cheap but can become a chokepoint. If molding lags, the filler will idle. Keep at least a 20–30 bottle buffer in a chest feeding the filler to absorb molding hiccups.
Energy and power If your base has power constraints, schedule heavy production during off-peak times or add a small generator dedicated to the grout line. Power dips are a silent killer of automation.
Prioritization When resources are tight, prioritize the grout line over nonessential production. Use splitters with priority settings or manual routing to ensure the crucible and filler never starve.
Troubleshooting: common failure modes and fixes
Filler idle but crucible running
Check bottle supply. If bottles are present but not consumed, confirm the filler’s bottle input is connected and not blocked by a full conveyor.
Verify fluid pipe alignment. If the crucible output arrow doesn’t point into the filler, rotate pipes until it does.
Crucible not producing
Confirm the crucible recipe is set to Liquid Xiranite.
Check solid Xiranite buffer chest and water supply. If either is empty, trace upstream to the Forge or water source.
Bottles piling up after filler
Protocol Stash or storage is full. Add another stash or route filled bottles to a larger storage chest.
Conveyor jam between filler and stash. Clear the jam or add a bypass.
Forge stalls
Stabilized Carbon or other inputs are depleted. Add more plant loops or increase input throughput.
Power dips. Check generator output and add a dedicated power source if needed.
Pipe leaks or misdirection
Fluid pipes are directional. Rotate until arrows show flow into the intended machine.
Avoid long, convoluted pipe runs; keep fluid paths short and direct.
Quick checklist to run when something stops:
Are there empty bottles in the filler input?
Is the crucible recipe correct and does it have both inputs?
Are pipe arrows aligned into the filler?
Are conveyors between machines clear and not full?
Are buffer chests full or empty in a way that indicates upstream or downstream blockage?
Advanced tactics and automation tricks
Parallelization with staggered cycles Stagger Forge and molding cycles so they don’t peak simultaneously. This reduces conveyor congestion and keeps buffers at steady levels.
Priority routing for emergency grouting Create a manual override or a priority splitter that routes all filled bottles to a designated grouting station when a fissure opens. This ensures immediate response without reconfiguring the whole base.
Smart buffer sizing Use small buffers (10–30 units) at high-frequency junctions and larger buffers (50–200 units) at strategic storage points. Too-large buffers hide inefficiencies; too-small buffers cause frequent stalls.
Redundancy for critical machines Duplicate the Filling Unit rather than the crucible if you expect frequent fissures but limited space. Two fillers can consume fluid from one crucible if you add a short fluid splitter, smoothing consumption spikes.
Monitoring and alerts If your play environment supports it, set up visual markers or a simple checklist to check before a fissure event: Forge levels, water tank, bottle buffer, filler status. A five-second pre-check saves minutes of downtime.
Comparison of common layouts
| Layout | Footprint | Ease of maintenance | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single-line compact | Small | Very easy | Solo players, small bases |
| Dual-line balanced | Medium | Moderate | Regular fissure activity |
| Multi-crucible complex | Large | Complex | Heavy fissure seasons, group play |
Use the compact layout to learn the flow, the balanced layout for reliable mid-game play, and the complex layout when you want near-continuous grout production.
Example play session: from fissure alert to sealed rift
Imagine a fissure opens while you’re mid-mission. Here’s a fast, repeatable sequence to respond:
Check the Protocol Stash near the grouting site for filled bottles. If present, deploy them immediately.
If stash is empty, open the base UI and check the Filling Unit status. If it’s idle, confirm bottle and fluid inputs.
If the filler is producing, route the nearest conveyor to the grouting site using the priority splitter.
If the filler is starved for bottles, manually transfer a small bottle buffer from molding to the filler to kickstart production.
After the fissure is sealed, return the priority splitter to normal routing and let buffers refill.
This sequence minimizes downtime and leverages buffers and priority routing to keep fissures from escalating.
FAQ
How much Liquid Xiranite do I need per fissure? One filled Ferrium Bottle of Liquid Xiranite is typically consumed per grout action. Keep a stash of 10–20 bottles per fissure-prone area for quick response.
Can I store Liquid Xiranite as fluid instead of bottles? Most grouting mechanics require filled bottles. Storing fluid in tanks is useful for smoothing production but you’ll still need a Filling Unit to convert fluid into deployable bottles.
Why does my Filling Unit keep idling even though the crucible is producing? The most common reason is a lack of empty bottles. Check the molding line and the bottle input. If bottles are present but not consumed, verify pipe alignment and conveyor flow.
Is it better to add more crucibles or more fillers? If your crucibles are producing faster than the filler consumes, add fillers. If fillers are starved for fluid, add crucibles. Balance is key: scale both sides proportionally.
What’s the single best optimization to reduce downtime? Add small buffer chests at Forge→Crucible, Molder→Filler, and Filler→Stash. Buffers absorb spikes and prevent machines from stalling while you fix upstream issues.
Final checklist before you go live
Confirm crucible recipe is set to Liquid Xiranite.
Align pipe arrows so fluid flows into the Filling Unit.
Keep a 20–30 bottle buffer feeding the filler.
Add a small chest between Forge and Crucible for 10–20 solid Xiranite.
Stagger planting cycles to avoid simultaneous harvest spikes.
Set up a priority splitter for emergency routing to grouting stations.
Monitor power and add a dedicated generator if needed.
Closing notes and next steps
This guide gives you a complete, practical path from first-time grout attempts to a robust, automated Liquid Xiranite production line in Arknights Endfield. Start with the compact blueprint to learn the flow, then scale to a balanced or full-scale layout as fissure frequency and base size demand. Keep buffers small but strategic, prioritize bottle supply, and always confirm pipe directionality after placement.







