Bx106
| Bx106 | |||||
| View static image | |||||
| 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.
This pattern was a considerable improvement on previous known Spartan technology for duplicating Herschel signals, most of which involved variants of a Silver G-to-H or Callahan G-to-H. Even non-Spartan Herschel duplication had been fairly slow and consumed a lot of time and space and half a dozen stages[2], until the discovery of the syringe early in 2015.
References
- ↑ Luka Okanishi (April 13, 2016). Re: The Hunting of the New Herschel Conduits (discussion thread) at the ConwayLife.com forums
- ↑ Adam P. Goucher (January 10, 2012). Re: Thread For Your Accidental Discoveries (discussion thread) at the ConwayLife.com forums