Ores - Space Engineers Wiki (2024)

Ore is a basic resource item, usually obtained by mining Asteroids. Using a Hand Drill or ship-mounted Drill will destroy the rock and release the Ores as objects in the world to be collected. While useless on its own, Ore can be processed in a Refinery, Basic Refinery, or Survival Kit to be turned into a useful Material.

Contents

  • 1 Appearance and Identification
  • 2 Ore Information
    • 2.1 Stone
    • 2.2 Iron Ore (Fe)
    • 2.3 Nickel Ore (Ni)
    • 2.4 Cobalt Ore (Co)
    • 2.5 Magnesium Ore (Mg)
    • 2.6 Silicon Ore (Si)
    • 2.7 Silver Ore (Ag)
    • 2.8 Gold Ore (Au)
    • 2.9 Platinum Ore (Pt)
    • 2.10 Uranium Ore (U)
    • 2.11 Ice
    • 2.12 Scrap Metal
  • 3 Refining
  • 4 References

Appearance and Identification

Identifying ore patches purely by sight can be frustrating, especially if there are two similar ores next to one another (such as Platinum and Silicon). It is for this reason that an Ore Detector is always highly recommended for the initial identification process. The Hand Drill has a small Ore Detector built in, whereas a ship-based Ore Detector has a larger detection radius. This will put the name of the ore on the HUD in approximately the center of the ore patch. However, once you have identified the vein you wish to obtain, it can often be more effective to rely on sight to guide your mining, and so a Spotlight is almost always useful for this purpose, to more easily see where one vein ends and another begins.

See the images and descriptions in the table below for more information on each ore.

Ore Information

Stone

Raw Material
Stone

Mass1kg

1,000g
1,000,000mg
1.0e-3t

Volume0.37L

3.7e-4m³
2.368e-5Large-Blocks
0.00296Small-Blocks
0.037hL
370mL

Refined Mass50.4g

0.0504kg
50,400mg

BrowseLast edit: 2020-04-04

A sample of Stone

Color varies slightly. Typically a matte midtone grey, the appearance of stone can vary a bit between brown and black.

Rarity: 31% [1]

Iron Ore (Fe)

Raw Material
Iron Ore

Mass1kg

1,000g
1,000,000mg
1.0e-3t

Volume0.37L

3.7e-4m³
2.368e-5Large-Blocks
0.00296Small-Blocks
0.037hL
370mL

Refined Mass700g

0.7kg
700,000mg

BrowseLast edit: 2020-04-04

A sample of Iron Ore

Red and Grey. Iron is fairly easy to identify due to being so common and in such contrast to the grey of the surrounding stone. Focus on looking for reddish, rust-colored areas if Iron is a priority.

Rarity: 50% [1]

Nickel Ore (Ni)

Raw Material
Nickel Ore

Mass1kg

1,000g
1,000,000mg
1.0e-3t

Volume0.37L

3.7e-4m³
2.368e-5Large-Blocks
0.00296Small-Blocks
0.037hL
370mL

Refined Mass400g

0.4kg
400,000mg

BrowseLast edit: 2020-04-04

Brown. Nickel is a straight, flat, brown, which when it spawns next to Iron shows strikingly enough to be discernable.

Rarity: 2% [1]

Cobalt Ore (Co)

Raw Material
Cobalt Ore

Mass1kg

1,000g
1,000,000mg
1.0e-3t

Volume0.37L

3.7e-4m³
2.368e-5Large-Blocks
0.00296Small-Blocks
0.037hL
370mL

Refined Mass300g

0.3kg
300,000mg

BrowseLast edit: 2020-04-04

A sample of Cobalt Ore

Blue. The blue streaks are relatively easy to see, but it could be mistaken for Magnesium and vice-versa. The best way to distinguish between them is that cobalt ore has a much lighter blue and has more bluish color than grayish base.

Rarity: 2.2% [1]

Magnesium Ore (Mg)

Raw Material
Magnesium Ore

Mass1kg

1,000g
1,000,000mg
1.0e-3t

Volume0.37L

3.7e-4m³
2.368e-5Large-Blocks
0.00296Small-Blocks
0.037hL
370mL

Refined Mass7g

0.007kg
7,000mg

BrowseLast edit: 2020-04-04

A sample of Magnesium Ore

Blue. Rather distinct, Magnesium is not very hard to identify, but is fairly rare, so always keep a look out for the bluish hue!

Rarity: 2.4% [1]

Silicon Ore (Si)

Raw Material
Silicon Ore

Mass1kg

1,000g
1,000,000mg
1.0e-3t

Volume0.37L

3.7e-4m³
2.368e-5Large-Blocks
0.00296Small-Blocks
0.037hL
370mL

Refined Mass700g

0.7kg
700,000mg

BrowseLast edit: 2020-04-04

A sample of Silicon Ore

Grey. One of three greyish ores, Silicon can be the most difficult to spot due to how close its color and texture are to base stone. Its color will often vary to a light grey, almost white sheen, so look for uncharacteristically light patches.

Rarity: 2% [1]

Silver Ore (Ag)

Raw Material
Silver Ore

Mass1kg

1,000g
1,000,000mg
1.0e-3t

Volume0.37L

3.7e-4m³
2.368e-5Large-Blocks
0.00296Small-Blocks
0.037hL
370mL

Refined Mass100g

0.1kg
100,000mg

BrowseLast edit: 2020-04-04

A sample of Silver Ore

Bluish-Silver. Another grey ore, Silver can be differentiated between Platinum most by its contrast: dark areas are jet black, while highlights are bright white. "Shiny" is an apt description.

Rarity: 2% [1]

Gold Ore (Au)

Raw Material
Gold Ore

Mass1kg

1,000g
1,000,000mg
1.0e-3t

Volume0.37L

3.7e-4m³
2.368e-5Large-Blocks
0.00296Small-Blocks
0.037hL
370mL

Refined Mass10g

0.01kg
10,000mg

BrowseLast edit: 2020-04-04

A sample of Gold Ore

Gold. Very distinct. Can vary more to a grey-yellow in small patches or where it starts to mix with stone or iron.

Rarity: 2% [1]

Platinum Ore (Pt)

Raw Material
Platinum Ore

Mass1kg

1,000g
1,000,000mg
1.0e-3t

Volume0.37L

3.7e-4m³
2.368e-5Large-Blocks
0.00296Small-Blocks
0.037hL
370mL

Refined Mass5g

0.005kg
5,000mg

BrowseLast edit: 2020-04-04

A sample of Platinum Ore

Grey. Can be hard to differentiate between this and stone or silicon. The most reliable distinction is the texture rather than color: stone and silicon have a rough look, while platinum is smooth.

Rarity: 2% [1]

Uranium Ore (U)

Raw Material
Uranium Ore

Mass1kg

1,000g
1,000,000mg
1.0e-3t

Volume0.37L

3.7e-4m³
2.368e-5Large-Blocks
0.00296Small-Blocks
0.037hL
370mL

Refined Mass10g

0.01kg
10,000mg

BrowseLast edit: 2020-04-24

A sample of Uranium Ore

Black. Jet black, very shiny. Hard to miss, even in shadow (unless your server's Skybox has low light).

Rarity: 4.4% [1]

Ice

Raw Material
Ice

Mass1kg

1,000g
1,000,000mg
1.0e-3t

Volume0.37L

3.7e-4m³
2.368e-5Large-Blocks
0.00296Small-Blocks
0.037hL
370mL

Refined Mass100g

0.1kg
100,000mg

BrowseLast edit: 2020-04-12

A sample of Ice

Blue. Blue and White, Shiny.

Scrap Metal

Raw Material
Scrap Metal

Mass1kg

1,000g
1,000,000mg
1.0e-3t

Volume0.254L

2.54e-4m³
1.6256e-5Large-Blocks
0.00203Small-Blocks
0.0254hL
254mL

Refined Mass800g

0.8kg
800,000mg

BrowseLast edit: 2020-04-04

A sample of Scrap Metal

While technically not a mineral, it behaves just like the other ores. Scrap is acquired by drilling Blocks or grinding damaged blocks.

Refining

Each Ore (including Stone) yields some sort of usable Material once it has been refined within a Refinery or Basic Refinery. Each Ore (except for Stone) has exactly one type of Material that it produces, at various rates of efficiency; e.g. 1000 kg of Uranium Ore will not produce 1000 kg of Uranium Ingots. See each type of refiner (Refinery, Basic Refinery, Survival Kit) for their conversion tables.

Raw Materials

Cobalt Ore

Gold Ore

Ice

Iron Ore

Magnesium Ore

Nickel Ore

32px Organic

Platinum Ore

Scrap Metal

Silicon Ore

Silver Ore

Stone

Uranium Ore

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 File:Ore Rarity Test.xlsx Space Engineers v01.047 - New World Generator, Asteroids Scenario, Extreme Asteroid Amount (16 large, 80 small)
Ores - Space Engineers Wiki (2024)

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