4Z4 method

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4Z4 method
Z4.gif
Information about the method
Proposer(s): Joseph Tudor
Proposed: 2017
Alt Names:
Variants:
No. Steps: 10
No. Algs: 52 (1 OLL parity, 42 COLL, 9 EPLL+parity)
Avg Moves: 130?
Purpose(s):

The 4Z4 method is a 4x4 speedsolving method for ZZ method solvers. It starts off with a redux stage very similar to the Yau method's, but it ends with a ZZ finish, giving the preferable method for ZZ solvers while retaining the advantages that Yau has. It is a definite improvement over other ZZ based 4x4 methods such as Z4 and NS4 due to a lower movecount and better ergonomics.

Currently, there are no notable solvers with 4Z4 as it is quite a new method, as well as there being very few ZZ solvers who are fast at 4x4.


Steps

  1. Solve 2 opposite centres. These will be your L and R colours that you use for ZZ on 3x3.
  2. Solve 3 pseudo cross edges on L. (These have to meet a specific requirement and will be explained later.)
  3. Solve last 4 centres
  4. Solve final pseudo cross edge
  5. Pair last 8 edges using 3-2-3 edge pairing or your preferred edge pairing technique
  6. Solve line. You do this by positioning the line edge that isn't in the pseudo cross in DR, and using an L move to place the other one at DL. You then do a D/D' to solve the line, then an L2 to positiont the pseudo cross in DL.
  7. Solve edge orientation and do OLL parity
  8. ZZ F2L
  9. COLL
  10. EPLL+Parity


The Pseudo Cross

The pseudo cross needs to have these specific edges:

  • 1 line edge
  • The left cross edge (and should match with your left centre)
  • 2 edges that don't meet the other requirements (any E slice edge, any U layer edge and the opposite cross edge)

It is generally considered better if you solve the line edge and the cross edge in the same relationship to each other every time (for example, opposite). Also, you don't technically have to solve the cross edge, but it limits the amount of L2 moves you have to do later on.

Edge Orientation

The way you do edge orientation is identical to the way in Petrus, just you need to stretch the definition of a bad edge to any edge. You hold the cube so that the line and pseudo cross are in BD (which means tha your L/R colours are on F/B).

There are 2 types of edges:

  • E slice
  • U/D layer

If an E slice edge is in E, and the colour on F is opposite or the same as the centre colour, it is good. If it is not, it is bad. The inverse is true if the edge is on U/D. If the colour on U/D is opposite or the same to the colour of the centre on F, it is bad. If not, it is good.

For a U/D edge, if the U/D colour is the same/opposite as the U/D centre and is on U/D it's good. If the U/D colour isn't matching to the F centre, it is good, but if it is, it's bad.

You use R/L to flip edges, U/F to replace them, then undo the flip.

The parity algorithm flips one edge and doesn't preserve F2L. You hold the edge in UF and with the line in the normal position, so you essentially orientate as many edges in petrus style as possible, then rotate to put your line in the normal position, do parity, then continue. This is the algorithm: Rw U2 Rw2 U' Rw' U2 Rw U2 Rw' U Rw2 U2 Rw2 U R2 U' Rw'

NB. If you are good at LEOR, the line and EO step can be merged into one.

Last Layer

For the last layer, you can use the same COLL algs as on 3x3, as you don't need to worry about orientation parity due to it being solved already.

After COLL, you have EPLL+parity. There are the 4 normal EPLL cases (H-perm, Ua-perm, Ub-perm, Z-perm), plus the additional opposite swap, adjacent swap, Oa, Ob and W permutations.

Opposite swap Opppllparity.png

Speedsolving Logo tiny.gif r2 U2 r2 Uw2 r2 u2 (12,6) N Chris Hardwick [1]
Speedsolving Logo tiny.gif (Rw2 F2 U2) r2 (U2 F2 Rw2) (14,7) N Stefan Pochmann [2]


Adjacent swap Oadjpllparity.png

Speedsolving Logo tiny.gif (R U R' U') r2 U2 r2 Uw2 r2 Uw2 (U' R U' R') (20,14) N Chris Hardwick [3]
Speedsolving Logo tiny.gif (R U R' U') (Rw2 F2 U2) r2 (U2 F2 Rw2) (U R U' R') (22,15) N Stefan Pochmann []


Oa Permutation Circ4cyccw.png

Speedsolving Logo tiny.gif M2 U M2 U M' U2 l2 U2 r2 Uw2 r2 u2 M' (22,13) N [4]


Ob Permutation Circ4cy.png

Speedsolving Logo tiny.gif M2 U' M2 U' M' U2 l2 U2 r2 Uw2 r2 u2 M' (22,13) N [5]


W permutation Zigzag4cycdedges.png

Speedsolving Logo tiny.gif (U') R' U R' U' R' U' R' U R U' Uw2 r2 Uw2 r2 U2 Rw2 (21,16) SP04 N Stefan Pochmann [6]


Do the correct algorithm out of the 9, and you're done!

Example solve

Scramble: R Uw B' Uw' Rw' B2 Uw2 B' Uw' L2 D' Fw' B F2 Uw' B2 F' U2 F D' Uw2 R' Rw L2 Fw B' Rw' U' L2 Rw' B' U D Uw R' F' Rw2 F2 B' Uw'

z//inspection

D U Rw' F' U2 Rw2 U Rw Uw2 U' y Rw U2 Rw'//F2C, L&R colours

z F R U Rw U Rw' L' F//Pseudo cross

L2 3Rw' U' 3Rw2 U Rw U' Rw2 3Rw U 3Rw2 U Rw U' Rw' 3Rw2 Rw2 U2 Rw2 U' 3Rw' Rw U Rw' Lw' L U2 Rw// L4C

z' y' Uw2 R' U' R Uw2 F2//Solve pseudo cross

Uw' F' U F L' U2 L y2 Uw2 U F U' F' Uw' y R U R' Uw' R U2 R' Uw//Pair edges

z R2 L2 D L2//Solve line

y L F L' y' R2 U Rw U2 Rw2 U' Rw' U2 Rw U2 Rw' U Rw2 U2 Rw2 U R2 U' Rw'//Edge orientation

R' U R U L U L' R' U' R' U2 R' U R' U2 R U2 R' U R L' U' L//ZZ F2L

U R' U L U' R U L'//COLL

Rw2 F2 U2 Rw2 R2 U2 F2 Rw2 U2 //EPLL+Parity [7]

142 moves with double parity.

Advantages and Disadvantages

Advantages:

  • Gives a ZZ finish for a similar movecount to Yau, with all of the advantages Yau has.
  • Better ways to deal with parity. The number of algs used in a solve with double parity is one less than with standard Yau with double parity, and PLL parity recognition is easier due to corners being solved.
  • The EO recognition is suitable for doing mid-solve, unlike with standard ZZ.
  • Due to the freedom of having a wider selection of edges for pseudo cross, it is more efficient than yau cross.

Disadvantages:

  • Pseudo cross is more abstract than Yau cross, and therefore could be potentially slower as the recognition is harder.
  • More steps to do after reduction is done (2: line and EO).
  • Fewer pieces are directly solved in pseudo cross and EO compared to Yau and Hoya and Meyer.


See also

External links

  • Lars Petrus' EO tutorial: [8]
  • ZZ text tutorial (Conrad Rider): [9]
  • ZZ video tutorial (Phil Yu): [10]