Bx106

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Revision as of 22:13, 12 February 2019 by Dvgrn (talk | contribs) (Add reference, simplify pattern. Mentioning the R190 and including the Fx77 kind of implies that they're the only conduits that can connect to Bx106, but that's pretty far from being true.)
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Bx106
x = 56, y = 50, rule = B3/S23 27bo$18b2o5b3o$18b2o4bo$24b2o2$8bo$8bo14b2o$6b3o9b2o3b2o$6bo11b2o7$2o$ bo$bobo$2b2o$48bo$46b3o$45bo$45b2o$33bo$33b3o$2bo21b2o10bo$2bobo19bo 10b2o$2b3o20b3o$4bo16bo5bo$21b3o25b2o$24bo24b2o$23b2o8$54b2o$11b2o11bo b2o26b2o$6b2o3b2o9b3ob2o$6b2o14bo$22bo2$5b2o$6bo4b2o38b2o$3b3o5b2o38bo $3bo48bo$51b2o! #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 THEME 6 GRID GRIDMAJOR 0 SUPPRESS THUMBLAUNCH ]] #C [[ AUTOSTART ]] #C [[ ZOOM 8 GPS 20 LOOP 117 PAUSE 2 T 106 PAUSE 2 T 116 PAUSE 2 WIDTH 480 HEIGHT 600 THUMBSIZE 2 ]]
Pattern type Conduit
Conduit type Elementary
Input Herschel
Number of cells 26
Output offset (20, -14); (4, 20)
Step 106, 119 ticks
Recovery time
(ignoring FNG if any)
98 ticks
Minimum overclock period
(ignoring FNG if any)
Unknown
Spartan? Yes
Dependent? No
Discovered by David Buckingham
Year of discovery Unknown

Bx106 is an elementary Herschel duplicator with repeat time 98, discovered by Luka Okanishi on April 13, 2016.[1] The orientations of its two outputs are Fx and Bx, so its full technical name is Bx106_Fx119.

If it is not suppressed, the Fx119 Herschel output must attach to a dependent conduit, as shown in the infobox with an example F166. In the infobox pattern, two ghost Herschels mark the output locations.

References

  1. Luka Okanishi. Re: The Hunting of the New Herschel Conduits (discussion thread) at the ConwayLife.com forums