I was intrigued with the regular pulse that I was picking up during my scanning. As I processed a few more pings, I discovered that the phase had shifted a little bit toward the late direction with each pulse and then it stabilized for a while only to shift forward once again. That's when I realized that I was looking at a position induced shift and pulled up the scanning library.
Since I was orbiting the Seven itself on the Seven end of the Shorty, my natural frequency was close to that of a Seven triple-One formation. At the top of the list was the canopied Tag that was running a trio of such Seven triple-One formations, all hanging off of a central Six. I pulled up the scan profile for the three-phase canopy waveform and gave it a whirl.
My orbit itself, as always, is the basis for a scan. This is the reason why I usually hop onto a One or an Eleven, and for anything else, I have to interpolate the library. I had been converting much of the library to Seven perspective, but the Canopy scans were difficult to modify due to my current perspective. Now, with pulses to observe, I was finishing the interpolation rules.
May 12, 2010
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