After trying some squeeze catch patterns (where more than one ball is caught by…

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Reuben -

After trying some squeeze catch patterns (where more than one ball is caught by the same hand at the same time), I started wondering if it were possible to do a three ball pattern made up of only multiplexes and squeezes. Every duplex would involve one ball being effectively a pass (which raises severe technical problems) and the other going into the air. The passed ball would be one half of a squeeze catch, then this would repeat on the other side. I managed to run a few rounds, but was curious about what the siteswap, as I'm not very good at multiplex/synch notation. Here's a video: https://youtu.be/8nWl93i5O9Y (it's right at the beginning)
I'm thinking it's [21]. Any other theories?


p.s. the second pattern in the video is similarly weird, but with 4 balls. The same question applies.

Thanks :)

Reuben

The Void - - Parent

I think the first one is [42x]*.

JTV's slomo button would be useful here... :-)

^Tom_ - - Parent

I guess ([42x],0)* is probably the same as [21], but the pattern isn't synchronous, and [42x]* would be 6 balls how I'd parse it. Also I think that the 2x only works if it's explicitly (,) synchronized.
As for the slomo button, I agree, I had to turn on youtube's html5 trial to check because that has a speed setting. Given that JTV works for me considerably better in html5, it would be nice for JTV's html5 player to have a slomo button.

^Tom_ - - Parent

I posted on the video with what I think are the 4 siteswaps.


But now that I've remembered my password sername, I figured I'd post here as well.

1st: [21]

2nd: (4x,[22x])* as we worked out the other night.

3rd: sprung cascade - (6x,2x)*

4th: (4,2x)(4,2)*

 

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