Rx202
Revision as of 22:10, 15 December 2018 by Entity Valkyrie (talk | contribs)
| Rx202 | |||||
| View static image | |||||
| Pattern type | Conduit | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conduit type | Composite | ||||
| Input | Herschel | ||||
| Number of cells | 97 | ||||
| Output orientation | Turned right, flipped | ||||
| Output offset | (7, 32) | ||||
| Step | 202 ticks | ||||
| Recovery time (ignoring FNG if any) |
201 ticks | ||||
| Minimum overclock period (ignoring FNG if any) |
Unknown | ||||
| Spartan? | No | ||||
| Dependent? | No | ||||
| Discovered by | David Buckingham | ||||
| Year of discovery | 1997 | ||||
| |||||
Rx202 is a composite conduit, one of the original sixteen Herschel conduits, discovered by Dave Buckingham in May 1997. It is made up of two elementary conduits, HR143B and BFx59H. After 202 ticks, it produces an inverted Herschel turned 90 degrees clockwise at (7, 32) relative to the input. Its recovery time is 201 ticks. The eater 1 welded onto the eater 3 can be removed if the following conduit is dependent, but the eater 3 then must be stabilised with snakes near the outer edge.
In the pattern shown in the infobox, a ghost Herschel marks the output location.
External links
- Rx202 at the Life Lexicon