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Farsight Studios
Pinball Arcade Tables
Bally Tables - Retired Tables
Cactus Canyon (1998)
Done with Cactus Canyon
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<blockquote data-quote="netizen" data-source="post: 137417"><p>As near as can be determined by comparing both <a href="http://mirror2.ipdb.org/images/4445/image-17.jpg" target="_blank">ipdb</a> and the table explore mode angles, the post at the end of the loop is not exposed. For the angle to be changed because of that post, the post itself would have to be out of alignment, or the loop guide is misaligned.</p><p></p><p>Had the post been exposed and if it were the cause then every ball that came down the loop would hit it, not just every one once in a while.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Just because you'd never seen it on AFM doesn't mean it couldn't have been possible on a real machine with improperly aligned parts too. If the loop guide doesn't line up with the next part properly there is just as much likelihood for the hop that was present in the digitized version, much like what is in CC, or in BR</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="netizen, post: 137417"] As near as can be determined by comparing both [URL="http://mirror2.ipdb.org/images/4445/image-17.jpg"]ipdb[/URL] and the table explore mode angles, the post at the end of the loop is not exposed. For the angle to be changed because of that post, the post itself would have to be out of alignment, or the loop guide is misaligned. Had the post been exposed and if it were the cause then every ball that came down the loop would hit it, not just every one once in a while. Just because you'd never seen it on AFM doesn't mean it couldn't have been possible on a real machine with improperly aligned parts too. If the loop guide doesn't line up with the next part properly there is just as much likelihood for the hop that was present in the digitized version, much like what is in CC, or in BR [/QUOTE]
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Home
Forums
Farsight Studios
Pinball Arcade Tables
Bally Tables - Retired Tables
Cactus Canyon (1998)
Done with Cactus Canyon
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