3pens Posted April 12, 2007 Posted April 12, 2007 Hello I am afraid I am being a bit lazy and I can't really be arsed to trawl through a manual. I thought there was bound to be someone who had used this desk before. I am lighting a show (and I have a programer but he doesn't speak english, brilliant I can't wait) and I was wondering if the desk could do some of the following. -part cues (as in ETC part cues) -setting up scrollers as fixtures to enable auto scroll moves and frame by frame movement. Also so I don't have to plot in complicated follow on's to ensure that they are in the correct frame. (Rainbow Scrollers) -do they have an offline editor? Is the show transferable via USB stick? -how quick is it to programme these desks (in case I need to do some changes and my programmer isn't around). I have mainly worked with Strand and ETC will I find this desk similar in any way? I hope somone can offer there comments on their experiance of this desk. Many thanks 3pens
thelxbloke Posted April 12, 2007 Posted April 12, 2007 For the benifit of others, is this the desk? http://www.sgmtechnologyforlighting.com/pr...149&m_id=28 Regards Steve
Nat_Keiller Posted April 14, 2007 Posted April 14, 2007 I am afraid I am being a bit lazy and I can't really be arsed to trawl through a manual. This may be why there haven't been many replies to your question...
Andrew C Posted April 14, 2007 Posted April 14, 2007 Or maybe no ones ever used one. I don't even remember seeing one at a trade show!
Trundle Posted April 14, 2007 Posted April 14, 2007 Or maybe no ones ever used one. I don't even remember seeing one at a trade show! I can honestly say ive never heard of this desk !
3pens Posted April 15, 2007 Author Posted April 15, 2007 For the benifit of others, is this the desk?http://www.sgmtechnologyforlighting.com/pr...149&m_id=28 Regards Steveyep! thats the one! I am afraid I am being a bit lazy and I can't really be arsed to trawl through a manual.This may be why there haven't been many replies to your question...Or rather I am too busy (would be more accurate) I thought most technically minded lighting people would apreciate the chance to share their wealth of knowledge on an obscure desk that I cannot find any information on anywhere. can anyone help?
Recommended Posts
Archived
This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.