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Gas Intake Fitting

Overview

The Gas Intake Fitting is a building that acts as a centralized vacuum/ventilation unit for a base. In practice it operates like a central vacuum system: instead of relying on many small vents or local extraction points, it provides a single, consolidated means to remove or relocate gas from areas of the base. All language sources describe it succinctly as a central vacuum or centralized ventilation device, emphasizing its role in broad, base-level gas handling rather than localized micro-management.

Because it functions as a centralized extractor, the Gas Intake Fitting is best thought of as an infrastructure component for base-wide atmosphere control. It reduces the need for multiple point-extraction devices and is useful whenever you want a single mechanism to draw gas away from rooms or corridors. Use it where you want to simplify gas routing and consolidate gas removal into one place rather than spreading many separate vents throughout a base.

  • Centralizes gas removal: replaces or supplements many small extraction points with a single system.
  • Simplifies atmospheric management: useful for broad control of gas composition or for keeping work areas clear of unwanted gases.
  • Planning consideration: place it where centralized extraction is preferable to multiple local vents; it is oriented toward base-scale solutions rather than fine-grained, room-by-room control.

The available descriptions across languages uniformly characterize the Gas Intake Fitting as this kind of central vacuum/ventilation solution; treat it as an architectural utility for large-scale gas handling in your base.

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