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J Pearce

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Posts posted by J Pearce

  1. The Jands/Chroma Q Stage-CL provides an interesting control layout for folks who really just want a fader per light - per channel it has a fader, a hue dial, and a saturation dial. Effects can be accessed by a touchscreen. 

    It can do fancier things, but for sitting in a corner and letting folk setup a scene on some non-mover LEDs it's quite a user-friendly option.

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  2. I had some at a previous job. Punchy, great vocal quality. Nicely packaged and easy to use. Wants a sub for any real sense of bass extension (we used the SBa760, but I think that's discontinued now).

    Not heard the equivalent iQ so can't provide a comparison.

  3. Quote

    Get-Outs 3.3.3.1

    Definition And Scope

    3.3.3.1.1 A “Get-Out” shall mean and include where required by the Management the dismantling and removal by the Theatre’s Stage and Electrical Staff (and Wardrobe Staff if required) from the theatre and (other than for storage purposes in the case of Companies presenting productions in repertoire) the loading (not necessarily on the same day) on to vehicles after a Company’s final performance of its scenery, properties, costumes, effects and electrical equipment at any time and on any day belonging to a Visiting Management or a Resident Management for the purpose of playing another venue.

    3.3.3.1.2 These provisions shall not apply to shows operating under Equity/TIE Contracts and Puppet Shows or to theatres operating under Equity Subsidised Repertory or NonSubsidised Repertory Agreements except when a show is being transferred to play at another theatre (whether or not the Repertory Company is presenting it) or the scenery is being sold immediately as a whole to another Management for subsequent theatrical use.

    From the BECTU-TMA agreement. If you're not a BECTU house then ultimately it comes down to the contract between their producer/booking agent and your booker/producer.

  4. After checking settings and resyncing my next point of suspicion would be the antenna, but usually with a faulty antenna you see some RF coming out of the pack. I have seen packs do odd things after getting very sweat soaked, which has cleared up after a good internal clean.

  5. The best I managed on that front was many years ago on a rather dire amdram production of Sound of Music in a church, where the MD had decided to use the organ for some of the numbers. By the nature of amdram we never managed to rehearse both the organ and the lighting at the same time, and so on the first show the organist issued forth a large chord, the blower responded to demand, and the whole place blacked out.

    (They also used a real blindfold and the actor got lost and fell off the stage landing through the violin player’s violin - I was altogether rather happy when the show finished…)

  6. It’s also somewhat redundant in the age of led fixtures - it was designed to cool a laser printed acetate gobo enough for it to survive in the gate of a halogen lamped lantern.

    A Lustr/Ovation/whatever else can take a laser printer acetate natively and give you colour mixing fun too. And you can award yourself some green points for saving a tiny bit of power by using lots of hard to maintain and hard to recycle materials.

    (I said that last bit out loud again didn’t I?)

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  7. We use Fischer Amps chargers and their NiMh batteries. We have 5 of the 16 way chargers, and around 250 batteries (AA and AAA) in our stock. We date mark the batteries into stock, older batteries get shuffled onto non-show-critical jobs, and duff batteries get disposed of. On shows we use coloured dot stickers to denote two sets of batteries. On a matinee day we charge the evening set during the matinee show, which achieves full charge before battery change is due. Tech rehearsal days tend to weed out the dodgy batteries, and they usually fade so needing to do an interval swap would be a flag to take that battery out of circulation. We store our batteries fully charged, but don't leave them on charge. 

    The above is fairly industry standard, though there are other chargers and batteries out there.

    Re voltage and indicators - some mics can be told they're using NiMh and adjust their indicators accordingly, on others it's just a matter of getting used to interpreting the readout correctly. More modern upmarket transmitters use integrated lithium based batteries that use their own chargers (Axxient, Senn 6000/9000 etc.) and provide very accurate battery life estimations.

  8. You could probably fit any cheap dynamic mic capsule that will physically fit. There’s nothing fancy going on inside the headset, it just holds all the bits in the right place and routes the cabling.
    But obviously there’s no guarantee on level matching or sound quality.

  9. LED is nice, but not really necessary if it becomes complicated. If the truck is a full size car front then it'll easily accommodate a golf cart or leisure battery (and probably benefit from the weight). Add some suitably shaped car headlights from a scrap yard. If you want the lamps to run dimmer wire them in series. Add a crew operated switch.

    Halogen car headlights are only 55W. A pair is 110W, which is just shy of 10A. You wouldn't need a particularly large battery to run them for an hour.

  10. The Sony and Sennheiser SK6212 packs are ok in wigs too. If you're tight on budget see if anyone's got Sennheiser SK5212 or Shure UR1Ms in stock (with matching receivers) - both significantly smaller than G3/G4/2000 or Trantecs, but somewhat cheaper in price than Axients.

    As you're in Watford it's probably worth calling Autograph, they're only just down the road from you.

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