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LCedit+ v3.3 tutorial, chapter 3: Control your lights |
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Manual control
Using presets
Presets may look a bit overdone for simple lamps, but remember once you are going to use color scrollers, moving heads, etc., you will be very happy to have e.g. a "pb1" to center your beams, or a "po1" which sets your complicated fixture to default.
An instant preset on the fly; i-cue
What are active channels and what are layers? In order to understand how cues should be created and edited, the concept of layers and active channels must be clear. As an analogy to the concept you can see it as a big video screen (the LanBox mixer output), which has been divided into 512 squares (light channels). This screen is connected to e.g. a stack of 8 special DVD players (layers), which have the capability to output video to any of the 512 squares in a controllable way. The working is simple; If you turn on the output of a square of a player, it comes on the screen, otherwise you will see the output of a lower player of the stack. So whatever you do, the top most player has the highest priority, any lower players have a lower priority in that order. The nice thing of this concept is that you can e.g. play two movies, and show 4 pictures independently on any place on the screen, as long as you turn on the right squares on each player (and the movie/picture must have been made so it fits in the assigned square). Even better is the fact that if you put e.g. a full size (all squares) picture in the lowest player, you will see this picture (or parts of it) once the other players stops, and turn off their output squares. In lighting it means that you can run a chase (movie) independently from e.g. some static cues (pictures), but you can even separate the moving actions of a moving head from the color choice of the same fixtures. It's a matter of using the right channels in your pre-made cues and chases. How do we activate and de-activate channels?
Note: The green square indicators have nothing to do with active, but indicate if a channel is "connected" to the mixer. More about layers If above is still not enough for you, the LanBox offers even more advanced operations on the layers, like mixing two layers with Highest Takes Precedence algorithm (HTP), or blend it with a certain amount of lower layers (transparency), etc. It must be clear that once you fully understand the working of this concept, you can create very complex lightings by hand, but you still miss a way to automate your show. Luckily we even did for see that ;-) In the LanBox you can create not only cues/chases with lighting information (we call them scenes), but you can also create cues (or part of it, called cue step) with just control information. This makes it possible to create e.g. a cue (or complete show) which starts a certain cue/chase in a certain layer, or output a MIDI command in order to start a digital audio recorder with a certain track, or reacts on an external connected switch, etc. It's clear, with the LanBox you can also automate complete shows, and it can do it completely stand-alone as everything is built-in! A LanBox can handle 31 layers (8 in a LC) on which a cue can be loaded, sequenced, chased or edited. The layers work as described above, but have several more mixing modes besides simple copy from the predefined scenes. Layers of the LanBox-LCX, LCE and LCM can even be reordered, dynamically created, custom labeled and deleted. In LCedit the channels of a layer (the squares) are off (inactive) if their values are gray, while black values are activated channels set to a value. So if you ever get confused about our layer and active channels concept, just read the DVD players story again and you will understand;-) OK, let's start with creating some cues. |
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Connect | Stage | Control | Cues | Show | Fixtures | Keys | UDP
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| Last updated: 20-04-2005 by: Fokko |
Copyright 1995..2005 CDS advanced technology bv. LanBox is a registered trademark of CDS advanced technology bv. All other names referenced are the service marks, trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective companies. Comments, suggestions, questions and info: www.lanbox.com |
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