I thought all you Clan peeps ran Angels?
Standard vision board:
- Turned on by the slide-switch on the side.
- Flick-switch on the back to change between vision/non-vision mode.
- Two little pots (dials) on the side to adjust dwell and eye sensitivity.
- Reflective eye would allow bolt to cycle as long as it detected something in the way; doesn't work well with black paint.
- Capped at 13bps in non-vision mode, 17bps in vision-mode.
Cricket vision board:
- Turned on by holding down the push-switch at the back (no slide switch on the side). Blue-light starts flashing.
- Press push-switch on back again to change between vision/non-vision mode. Blue light flashes in different sequence to indicate mode.
- Two push-buttons on side to adjust dwell up/down.
- Little speaker mounted on board will "chirp" to indicate modes/status/caps being hit, etc. SOME frames need this speaker moved as it doesn't always fit. SP will do it for u.
- Reflective eye would allow bolt to cycle when ball is detected, but then would prevent another shot until the breach is cleared and re-loaded. ie, can no longer test it whilst degassed with your finger over the eye.
- Capped at 13bps in non-vision mode, 20bps in vision-mode.
- Latest Cricket boards are capped at 20bps in either mode.
WAS board:
This isn't officially released yet, but all we know is that it works like the Timmy and AKA Equalizer boards, which means it detects the trigger at a whopping 1million times a second, has a different eye system, and will probably need your body drilled to fit it. As far as boards go, it's the one that every impulse owner is looking forward to.
Edit1: bah, that took me ages to write Paul!
Edit2: Oh, and before anyone flames me for the cap-rates, I don't actually know. I just took those off the Impulse Owners Group FAQ - seems there are different figures depending on who u ask