"Direct Control" means putting a rubber band around a center line attachment (customarily the center C opposite the tailgate) and taking a bight of the slider into it. This "directly" controls the slider, holding it up in the pack job until the canopy reaches line stretch and begins to inflate (when the expansion of the bottom skin pulls the rubber band off the slider/slider out of the rubber band), at which time the slider begins sliding down the lines.
"Indirect Control" refers to using the locking stow at the bottom of the tail pocket to keep the slider up in the pack job. It's called "indirect" because the rubber band doesn't touch the slider "directly".
I've found that taking a large fold of the slider, or using a tight direct control rubber band, can yield very slow Ace/BJ openings. I hypothesize that this has something to do with the longer line length (which would result in less outward pressure way up there at line stretch), but that's pure speculation on my part.
A while back, several of us with Ace/BJ's tried to sort this out at one of the Petronas events (so, shortish subterminal slider openings) and we generally found that removing the direct control altogether helped us quite a bit. You might want to give that a shot and see if it helps you.
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