beautypg.com

Blizzard Lighting Lucid DMX(Rev A) User Manual

Page 96

background image

Lucid DMX

IX Appendices

watch on your TV, in a lighting fixture you set the channel that you want your fixture to display the

information for. This is known as the DMX address.

In other words, if I set my lighting fixture to channel 21, then my fixture’s DMX address is 21. Both

expressions are common in the lighting world.

Example

Imagine we have a DMX dimmer that controls a simple light bulb. This dimmer is set to DMX address

21, so the lighting fixture will only receive the information from channel 21 and ignore the rest.

We have a controller that sends a signal through a DMX cable and this cable goes into a decoder (the

DMX dimmer) that receives the signal. So if the controller sends the “turn on” information on channel

21, the dimmer will turn on the light bulb.

Conventional lighting fixtures (simple dimmers) require 1 channel of information only. However,

intelligent lighting fixtures require more than 1 channel to work. For example, if I have a lighting fixture

that requires 5 channels of information, and its DMX address is 21 (again, address is the first channel

used by the fixture), then this fixture will use channels 21, 22, 23, 24, 25. The decoder knows that the

fixture needs 5 channels of information, so it will decode 5 channels only and ignore the rest. The

controller knows the fixture uses 5 channels also, so it will send 5 channels of information.

Example

Imagine you have a very simple robotic moving head that uses 5 channels:

1. pan

2. tilt

3. color wheel

4. gobo wheel

5. dimmer

You set your moving head to address 21 and you tell the controller that you have this particular moving

head on address 21. The controller then knows that channel 23 corresponds to color wheel, for

example. If you want to change the color of the light beam, you tell the controller what color you want,

the controller automatically sends this information through channel 23, and the lighting fixture reacts

accordingly.

Typically, intelligent lighting fixtures use 1 channel (sometimes more) for every function they can

perform (color, gobo, prism, dimmer, etc). Some robotic moving heads use over 20 channels, some

simple scanners only 4 channels, etc.

3. The protocol

So far, we’ve been referring to “information” traveling through DMX cables from the controller into the

fixture’s decoder. This “information” is nothing but a number between 0 and 255. This number is called

the DMX value for a particular channel. Then, the DMX signal is nothing but a series of DMX values

along 512 DMX channels.

Example

Back to our 5 channel simple robotic moving head; channel 3 controls the color wheel, which has 25

Page 92