Fx119

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Fx119
x = 23, y = 24, rule = B3/S23 o$obo$3o$2bo12$9b2o11bo$4b2o3b2o9b3o$4b2o14bo$20bo2$3b2o$4bo4b2o$b3o5b 2o$bo! #C [[ THUMBSIZE 2 THEME 6 GRID GRIDMAJOR 0 SUPPRESS THUMBLAUNCH ]] #C [[ AUTOSTART ]] #C [[ ZOOM 10 X 0 Y -10 GPS 20 LOOP 250 PAUSE 2 T 119 PAUSE 2 WIDTH 480 HEIGHT 480 THUMBSIZE 2 ]]
Pattern type Conduit
Conduit type Elementary
Input Herschel
Number of cells 26
Output orientation Unturned, flipped
Output offset (20, 14)
Step 119 ticks
Recovery time
(ignoring FNG if any)
231 ticks
Minimum overclock period
(ignoring FNG if any)
Unknown
Spartan? Yes
Dependent? No
Discovered by David Buckingham
Year of discovery 1996

Fx119 is an elementary conduit, one of the original sixteen Herschel conduits, discovered by Dave Buckingham in September 1996. After 119 ticks, it produces an inverted Herschel at (20, 14) relative to the input. Its recovery time is 231 ticks; this can be reduced somewhat by suppressing the output Herschel's glider, or by adding extra catalysts to make the reaction settle more quickly. It produces 3 gliders: the FNG, the "second natural glider" and another one going SW. By using a dependent conduit, this can be reduced to 160 ticks.

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

See also

External links