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So what fire mode was allowed in DMA

Re: Hmm

Originally posted by Chicago
since what he did say makes about as much sense as Intheno. ;)
Yeah it is kinda silly that we are having this little compettition to decipher what modes are allowed and what modes arent, based on what the tournament organiser mentioned at a different event!!!

This is supposed to be a proffessional organisation.
 
Nope

Originally posted by Nick Brockdorff
That's not it - you are way off actually.

The point is that you can programme a board so that no shots are fired after trigger release - and it still ramps

:)
Nick,

Does your special mode kick in at 5bps still??

There better be a good prize for me when I finally win this!!!





I dont see why autoresponse ramping wouldnt work. As it fires on the release of the trigger, not after it.
 

Nick Brockdorff

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Jul 9, 2001
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John

I dont see why autoresponse ramping wouldnt work. As it fires on the release of the trigger, not after it.
"at the release" - is the same as "after release" technically.

You first release, and then it fires.... because the firing sequence is prompted by the release, and thus logically comes after.

:)

Nick
 
John

Originally posted by Nick Brockdorff
"at the release" - is the same as "after release" technically.

You first release, and then it fires.... because the firing sequence is prompted by the release, and thus logically comes after.

:)

Nick
Technically, yes. But I guarantee it will always go bang before your finger loses contact with the trigger.





Back to the problem...
Does your suggested mode still kick in at 5bps?
 

Chicago

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Re: John

Originally posted by John C
Technically, yes. But I guarantee it will always go bang before your finger loses contact with the trigger.
I guarantee your marker will go bang after you reduce force on the trigger (the actual definition of trigger release, since most people probably never have their fingers not touching the trigger at all during rapid fire.)
 

manike

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Jul 9, 2001
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NXL code doesn't fire any shots after the last release of the trigger...

Considering how long some of the electronics and pneumatics take, I'd say it's entirely possible for every gun out there to fire the ball actually after you 'released' the trigger.

Better (clearer) definitions please.
 

Flash-Bugout

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Jul 6, 2001
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Nope

Originally posted by Nick Brockdorff
The point is that you can programme a board so that no shots are fired after trigger release - and it still ramps
Cool, psychic ramping modes that know which shot is the last and stops ramping.

Maybe it's my programmers brain kicking in, but I don't see how the logic of no shots after trigger release works, unless it's NXL code.