(Feb. 11, 2014 4:09 PM)Dark_Mousy Wrote: (Feb. 11, 2014 3:50 PM)AcidXblader Wrote: (Feb. 11, 2014 3:46 PM)Dark_Mousy Wrote: Its actually in the rulebook about applying stickers. You cant put them in plaes they arent meant to go.
It's exactly what i don't do. I just put a tape with exactly the same shape on it.
Tape affects the performance. Ive tried it myself, so trust me i know.
Really? If it's not making contact the difference would be minimal - as long as the tape is a single layer of relatively thin tape (standard cellotape) I still don't really see how it would cause a significant change in performance - it'd be less than doubling up on stickers (tape being less absorbent of impacts than paper, also with friction probably closer to plain metal than glossy sticker paper's is), which, while almost certainly technically illegal, is something I'm pretty sure no one has ever disqualified someone for (the extra .01g being about as relevant as a very light breeze blowing one way at launch). Unless a part has particularly large stickers or stickers in a location that makes contact I really don't see it making a difference...
(Feb. 12, 2014 6:20 AM)Beylon Wrote: I'd like to know why "bei" is used in the word "beigoma" from which Beyblade is derived.
As I understand, "Bei" means rice and "Goma" means sesame seed. But in beigoma, most people assume "Goma" is actually derived from "Koma" which describes wooden toys including spinning tops. So the "Goma" part I understand - but why "Bei?" What has rice got to do with anything?!
I'm told there is a "bei" related insult in Japanese that equates to calling someone "hollow" on account of some traditional Japanese food which was wrapped and hollow inside. A hollow spinning top will spin better than a solid one, I guess. Or maybe a reference to the hollow shells they used as beigoma? Or perhaps something to do with the traditional Japanese rice grinder - a big stone bowl?
Does anyone know anything about this at all?
The stone bowl sounds possible, IIRC they were played on a skin or linen or something along those lines placed over an open container but I'm honestly not sure and a quick google didn't find me anything. Hopefully someone else can give you an actual answer.
(Feb. 12, 2014 10:43 AM)天翔翼 TenshouYoku Wrote: 1. I know Wyvang is a good attack wheel when in synchrome mode, but if it is not in synchrome mode is it still that good? Besides, what makes Wyvang good even it (or in other words, all ZeroG chrome wheels) is not as balanced like the post zero-G metal wheels?
2. I saw some guys can make their Stome Capricorne jump for about nearly half a meter high. How the heck did they do that, since I can make it barely jump higher than 3cm?
3. How is the Hasbro Night Virgo doing? Is it any good?
1. The often poor balance has nothing to do with why non-Synchromed Chrome Wheels don't work well - it comes down to being a little over half the weight of a synchrome, with weights on par with pre-Maximum Series releases (hence the inclusion in Limited Format). For its weight, Wyvang has solid smash in left spin and perhaps it would overshadow lightning if defense were able to use the disk tracks because it hits side-on vs lightning hitting much more effectively from slightly below (same height + stadium slope is generally sufficient for this, of course). The Limited Format Primer and Random Thoughts thread has tests of most of the chrome wheels for Attack in non-synchromed setups (145 height v 145 height defense, my tests include benchmarks). There are a few missing but apparently none of them have any real promise for attack bar Bahamdia (which is generally inferior to wyvang for straight-up attack) and Gryph, which has its own thread IIRC.
2. Unless they were using a nonstandard surface (like a trampoline), an unmodified storm capricorn would struggle to jump that high, perhaps a mold 1 Q (see the beywiki article, though this is just a guess as I've never seen one in action) and a more powerful than standard launcher?
3. Back in the day it was the one Legend wheel I had hope for after they came out and it sucked. Virgo is a rather heavy wheel so making it lighter is unlikely to do any good (and Virgo has a surprising amount of weight around the middle that would be removed to accommodate a clear wheel). Still, there's been no testing of it since Limited began so I can't give you an answer with total confidence.