L156

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L156
x = 29, y = 47, rule = B3/S23 19b2o$19bo$17b3o16$17b2o$17b2o2$8b2obo$8bob2o$26b2o$26bo$24bobo$24b2o 2$9bo$9b3o$o11bo$3o8b2o14bo$3bo22bobo$2b2o23bo7$bo$bobo$b3o$3bo11b2o$ 15bo$16b3o$18bo! ---- #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 THEME 6 GRID GRIDMAJOR 0 SUPPRESS THUMBLAUNCH ]] #C [[ AUTOSTART ]] #C [[ ZOOM 8 X 0 Y 0 GPS 20 LOOP 157 PAUSE 2 T 156 PAUSE 2 WIDTH 480 HEIGHT 480 THUMBSIZE 2 ]]
Pattern type Conduit
Conduit type Composite
Input Herschel
Number of cells 56
Output orientation Turned left
Output offset (17, -41)
Step 156 ticks
Recovery time
(ignoring FNG if any)
62 ticks
Minimum overclock period
(ignoring FNG if any)
Unknown
Spartan? Yes
Dependent? No
Discovered by David Buckingham
Year of discovery 1996

L156 is a composite conduit, one of the original sixteen Herschel conduits, discovered by Dave Buckingham on August 7, 1996.[1] It is made up of three elementary conduits: HLx69R, RF28B, and BFx59H. After 156 ticks, it produces a Herschel turned 90 degrees counterclockwise at (17, -41) relative to the input. Its recovery time is 62 ticks. It can be made Spartan by replacing the snake with an eater 1 in one of two orientations. In the pattern shown in the infobox, a ghost Herschel marks the output location.

Three variants are shown below. The first is the one in the infobox. The second uses an alternative RF28B to produce a glider in a different direction. The third uses an RNE-19T84 to produce two extra gliders and convert the conduit into a period doubler.

x = 74, y = 97, rule = B3/S23 19b2o38b2o$19bo39bo$17b3o37b3o16$17b2o38b2o$17b2o38b2o2$8b2obo36b2obo$ 8bob2o36bob2o$26b2o$26bo$24bobo$24b2o2$9bo39bo$9b3o37b3o$o11bo27bo11bo $3o8b2o14bo12b3o8b2o14bo$3bo22bobo14bo22bobo$2b2o23bo14b2o23bo4$64b2o$ 64bobo$66bo$bo39bo24b2o$bobo37bobo18b2o$b3o37b3o18bo$3bo11b2o26bo11b2o 6b3o$15bo39bo9bo$16b3o37b3o$18bo39bo4$59b2o$59bo$57b3o16$57b2o$57b2o2$ 48b2obo$48bob2o2$33b2o$33bo16bo$31bobo15bobo$31b2o16bobo$47b3ob2o20bo$ 46bo24b3o$40bo6b3ob2o17bo$40b3o6bob2o17b2o$43bo$18bo23b2o$16b3o48b2o$ 16bobo47bo2bo$16bo50b2o4$41bo$41bobo$30b2o9b3o$17b2o11b2o11bo11b2o$18b o36bo$15b3o38b3o$15bo42bo! #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 THEME 6 GRID GRIDMAJOR 0 SUPPRESS THUMBLAUNCH ]] #C [[ AUTOSTART THUMBSIZE 2 ZOOM 10 WIDTH 480 HEIGHT 1750 X 8 GPS 16 PAUSE 2 T 73 PAUSE 2 T 77 PAUSE 2 T 97 PAUSE 2 T 108 PAUSE 2 T 156 PAUSE 2 T 399 PAUSE 2 LOOP 157 ]]
Three L156 variants

(click above to open LifeViewer)
RLE: here Plaintext: here

The third L156 variant produces an extra block, which is period-doubling. In the viewer, a Herschel coming 77 generations earlier will be blocked. For it not to be period-doubling, it must be deleted using either a reflector (such as the p8 bumper + dependent conduit) or a set of conduits (e.g. R64 + F117, at the cost of impractically high repeat time).

See also

References

  1. David Buckingham (October 12, 1996). "My Experience with B-heptominos in Oscillators". Paul Callahan's Page of Conway's Life Miscellany. Retrieved on November 9, 2020.

External links