Tinkerer (EQ2 Profession)  

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What is Tinkering?

Tinkering is one of the secondary tradeskills that became available with the release of Echoes of Faydwer.

According to Ebnix Cogsworth, Master Tinkerer, "Tinkering is the process created by gnomes many centuries ago. It was used to make the clockworks that served in the great city of Ak'Anon, as well as many devices that were used every day by tinkerers of auld."

How do I become a Tinker?

In order to become a tinker you need to be at least a level 3 crafter or have finished the beginning harvesting quest.

Speak to a Tinkering Trainer:

  • Kelethin: Ebnix Cogsworth, one platform west of the bank at 418, 89, 241 .
  • Butcherblock: Karsh Cogsworth, located at the east side of the Butcherblock docks at 637, 27, 595 .
  • Freeport: Kybosh Clangsworthy at -95, -25, 106 on Inventor's Outlook.
  • Qeynos: Morly Tinswaddle in South Qeynos, upstairs in the Bag, Barrel, 'n' Bank at 581, -8, 180 .

Who Can Use Tinkered Items

November 13, 2012
Game Update 65

With Chains of Eternity all tinkered items with the exception of the Mechanized Platinum Repository of Reconstruction are now tradable, can be used by all classes, and do not require tinkering skill to use.

Where are my Tinkering Tradeskill Arts?

Beside the tinkering trainers you will find a tinkering supply merchant. Tinkering merchants sell your tinkering books, but also sell tinkering tradeskill arts. We have four tinkering tradeskill arts - these are the only abilities we get and are never upgraded. They cost 19s 20c each. (But you get the skils when you become a tinkerer so there is no reason to buy them.)

Where are my recipes?

  • Professor Ebenezer Cogsworth VI in Kelethin sells the "Apprentice Blueprints" recipes which take you up to 110 tinkering skill level.
  • Corianda Cogsworth at the Butcherblock docks sells the "Dabbler's Blueprints" series (in addition to the "Apprentice Blueprints") which take you up to 210 skill.
  • Fizza Cogsworth, the tinkering merchant at the Gnomeland Security Headquarters in Steamfont Mountains, sells all the above plus "Experimenter's Blueprints" and "Master's Blueprints" that take the tinkerer up to 340 tinkering skill.
  • Fizza Clockfixer in Kylong Plains sells blueprints for skills 1 - 450

In addition, there are a number of dropped recipes which you may be fortunate enough to find while adventuring, or find on the broker with a search for "blueprints". These appear to require rare harvests. Not all these recipes have been identified yet.

Adornment Dislodgers

Prismatic Blueprints for Adornment Dislodgers are dropped in Chains of Eternity zones:

Trichromatic Blurprints are sold by Fizza Cogsworth in Steamfont Mountains:

Personal Depots

Added with GU67, tinkerers will find the Personal Depot recipes in Blueprint: Personal Harvest Depot

What supplies do I need?

With Game Update 33 the amount of resources used by Tinkering recipes was reduced. Tinkering uses a LOT of loams of all tiers, plus quite a lot of ore, soft metals and gems. The exact number of each varies with the item, but loam is generally what you will be most short of. In terms of the harvests required:

  • Tier 1: A typical tier 1 recipe uses 4-5 leaded loams, 4-6 lead clusters, 2 tin clusters, and 2-3 rough malachites, plus 4 coal, and returns lead clusters or malachite as byproducts.
  • Tier 2 (starts at tinkering skill 50, though a couple earlier recipes require just iron and the rest tier 1 harvests): A typical tier 2 recipe uses 5-7 salty loams, 5-7 iron clusters, 2-3 electrum cluster, 0-5 rough turquoise, and 5 brown coal, and returns iron or turquoise as byproducts.
  • Tier 3 (starts at tinkering skill 90): A typical tier 3 recipe uses 8 pliant loams, 0-5 agates, 3 gold clusters, and 1-8 carbonite, and returns agate (or occasionally carbonite).
  • Tier 4 (starts at tinkering skill 145): A typical tier 4 recipe uses 9-10 supple loams, 10-12 feyiron, 0-7 opaline, 3-4 velium, and returns feyiron or opaline.
Harvest amounts get increasingly greater as you progress in tier.

All tinkered items are made on a jewelery workbench, using coal of the appropriate tier.

How do I use the commission crafting system to make someone a no-trade item?

The commission crafting system is a little hard to find at first, but easy enough once you get the hang of it. First, you need to meet the customer in person, near a jewelery workbench.

Open up your recipe book and find the recipe that the customer wants you to make. Select the recipe in your book. Now target the CUSTOMER, not the workbench, and click "Create". This opens up the commission crafting window. The customer will see a list of the items needed and has to place at least one item in the window - this can be raws, or coin for payment, or fuel.

Once the customer has placed something in the window, both you and the customer can click "Accept". Your recipe list window will change to the crafting window that shows the ingredients for that recipe, and when you click "begin" the crafting process will start as normal. Once the item is complete, it will drop directly into the customer's inventory and you will receive whatever payment he placed in the window.

How do Tinkering levels work?

Tinkering is a skill, like mining or swimming, and so your progression in tinkering is measured numerically. Like other skills, you can gain 5 points in tinkering per level. So 100 points in tinkering is equivalent to level 20. You can see your tinkering skill on your skills tab (press P, go to the Skills tab, and choose Tradeskill on the bottom tab). Note: Raising your Tinkering skill does not use any of your Tradeskill Vitality.

Your maximum achievable level in tinkering is capped by your level in your primary tradeskill OR your adventure level, whichever is higher. So, for example, if you are a 50 provisioner/25 warden, you can reach the equivalent of level 50 in tinkering (50 x 5 = 250 skill). If you were a 25 provisioner/50 warden, you would have the same skill cap for tinkering.

You have a chance at skilling up in tinkering whenever you make a finished item. In beta, there was a 50% chance of a skill up when you completed an even-con (white) recipe. It is possible this rate may be tweaked on live or in the future, plus of course the random number generator does have its evil uncooperative streaks, so individual mileage will vary.

Items with +Tinkering

See our database for a list of all items that give + to the Tinkering skill. Click Here.

I hate Tinkering, am I stuck with it?

Yes, but no one said you have to use it! The only change to Tinkering with Sentinel's Fate is that you can now be a Tinkerer, Adorner, and Transmuter all at the same time.

Based on an original FAQ by Adeste - used with permission

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This page last modified 2014-12-23 13:43:57.