It doesn't matter what kind of tool I repair with the hammer on a workbench, it always needs the same amount of wear. If I repair a wooden axe I need one hammer to repair it. So it cost more to repair (two iron and two sticks) than to build a new one.
If I repair a diamond axe it also needs one hammer
A hammer should hold much longer and it should be a difference in repair time and wear if I repair a wooden tool or a diamond tool.
Repair time should be something like "wear/second". Then a wooden tool is repaired much faster then a diamond tool.
And the wear of the hammer should be reduced by the wear value of the tool. Then you can repair more wooden tools than for example iron tools.
It doesn't matter what kind of tool I repair with the hammer on a workbench, it always needs the same amount of wear. If I repair a wooden axe I need one hammer to repair it. So it cost more to repair (two iron and two sticks) than to build a new one.
If I repair a diamond axe it also needs one hammer
A hammer should hold much longer and it should be a difference in repair time and wear if I repair a wooden tool or a diamond tool.
Repair time should be something like "wear/second". Then a wooden tool is repaired much faster then a diamond tool.
And the wear of the hammer should be reduced by the wear value of the tool. Then you can repair more wooden tools than for example iron tools.