I don’t believe that to be true.kjlokesh wrote: ↑Tue Feb 25, 2020 10:27 amif you are using pendulum clock , make sure it runs consistently and without a touch. I believe if you touch then you will lose the timer bonus and action point. We use water raising the golf ball as timer.knightmoves wrote: ↑Wed Jan 29, 2020 12:48 pmA non-spring timer is the action from rule 4c. It may be one of your scoreable actions, but doesn't have to be. It's a thing that uses up time so that the run time of your device gets close to the target time. You can't use springs.Ltrikie415 wrote: ↑Wed Jan 29, 2020 11:44 am In section 5.h page 3 of Scoring, can someone give an example of what they mean by this section. I don’t know what a non spring timer is. Is this a separate non-scorable action so device run longer to reach the target time?
One example that has been used in the past is a hopper of sand, water, ball bearings, or something. The previous action opens a gate / valve, and the sand / water / ball bearings slowly run out of the hopper and fill some kind of scale pan, which operates a lever when it gets heavy enough.
In this year's rules, the pendulum clock looks like an obvious candidate to be the non-spring timer.
“If a participant completes a scorable action or makes an adjustment that leads directly to the completion of that action, then that action will not count for points, even if it is part of the Final Action”
The specific wording makes me think a touch half way through would be a touch for like “jamming” and be a touch penalty but not be an adjustment that leads “directly to the completion”. Obviously this can only be answered by submitting it to sonic.org but we had to touch our pendulum half way through at U of M and got the points for it. Completion of an action is the triggering of the next action so as long as it isn’t like a touch that directly leads to the next action, it is just a touch.
Obviously it’s canon to avoid making the event supervisor have to think, but I’d argue it.