Fx158

From LifeWiki
Revision as of 23:35, 29 March 2019 by Ian07 (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Fx158
x = 30, y = 30, rule = B3/S23 9bo4b2o$8bobo2bobo7b2o$7bo2b4o9bo$7bobo4bo6bobo$5b3ob2o2b2o6b2o$4bo$bo 2b4ob2o$b3o3bob2o$4bo$3b2o7$29bo$27b3o$27bo$27bo$o$obo$3o$2bo2$15b2o$ 9b2o4bobo$10bo6bo$7b3o7b2o$7bo! #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 THEME 6 GRID GRIDMAJOR 0 SUPPRESS THUMBLAUNCH ]] #C [[ AUTOSTART ]] #C [[ ZOOM 12 X 0 Y 0 GPS 20 LOOP 159 PAUSE 2 T 158 PAUSE 2 WIDTH 480 HEIGHT 480 THUMBSIZE 2 ]]
Pattern type Conduit
Conduit type Elementary
Input Herschel
Number of cells 67
Output orientation Unturned, flipped
Output offset (27, -5)
Step 158 ticks
Recovery time
(ignoring FNG if any)
176 ticks
Minimum overclock period
(ignoring FNG if any)
Unknown
Spartan? No
Dependent? No
Discovered by David Buckingham
Year of discovery 1996

Fx158 is an elementary conduit, one of the original sixteen Herschel conduits, discovered by Dave Buckingham in July 1996. After 158 ticks, it produces an inverted Herschel at (27, -5) relative to the input. Its recovery time is 176 ticks. It is the only known small conduit that does not produce its output Herschel via the usual Herschel great-grandparent, so it cannot be followed by a dependent conduit. Attempting to put a block there will just cause the block to be eaten.

In the pattern shown in the infobox, a ghost Herschel marks the output location.

External links