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Bjornlala

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    Working in the industry
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    Sound technician
  • Full Name
    Bjørn Larsen

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    Norway

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  1. Yes, lightjams seems to do it - but preferrably I will find a way to do this without use of computer. Looks like running an amp into an analog dimmer in some way is what I am looking for.
  2. Now this sounds interesting! "4R" - what do you mean by this? Interesting! I will check it. Ah, resistance I assume :) This sounds like it - at least on a cheap DIY level. Thanks! ...but the dimmer requires DC voltage?? Because the voltage from the amp is AC, or am I wrong?
  3. Interesting! I dont know much about this, but it seems software-dependant? Meaning computer-dependant, and I am preferrably looking for a way around this. Ok, so a hardware mixer would be able to follow the intensity of any sound and not just a bassdrum? I guess that is what you are writing anyways :) I guess what I am looking for is a highly sensitive light-trigger, so that it can give a flickering effect if the music is "flickery".
  4. Thanks, I will check that post! I am aware the audio-in on some light consoles, but seems to me that it is mostly used for changing fixtures and that it (mostly) reacts to beats like a bassdrum? I atleast cannot find anything about a way to increase the dimmer from 0 to full with the intensity of sound. Let alone add the flickering effect. I found one page that writes about using fluorescent tube starters together with normal lightbulbs to get a "fire-flickery effect" - so far the closest I come to what I have in mind :) But I will check the post you mention, maybe all my answers are there!
  5. Hello and sorry if this question is weirdly worded - I am a sound technician.. Is there a way to have audio-noise (as in some kind of musical noise - not white/pink noise) adjusting the dimmer of a par can/LED light? So that it gives a flickering effect. Preferrably the longterm increase in level of the noise/sound will also increase the dimmerlevel to full level over time - all the time with the flickering effect. Hope this makes sense - and is doable at some not-to-expensive level. Kind regards,Bjørn Norway
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