Odd submaster / keyboard control issue
Posted: 19 Dec 2011, 15:18
I have made pretty good progress setting up the fixtures for my show but have been struggling a bit trying to wrap my head around how to actually operate it. Its a pretty straight forward rock and roll light show so the main functionality I need is to be able to swap back and forth between maybe 3 different washes, add some flashes and chases on the smaller fixtures and add in some effects with a laser, a couple scanners and a fogger. The washes in particular were giving me fits. I want to be able to hit 1 button to bring up a wash, hit another button to bring up another wash, etc. I am currently using keyboard shortcut keys but they may be replaced with a MIDI controller at some point. The initial problem I had either running it from the cue list or from a submaster was that the "next" wash wouldn't turn off the first one. So I redid my sequences to include a "snap all values to 0" as the first step. That seemed to work in the cue list but did not work exactly as planned in the submasters. I added a different colored wash to each of the 1s 3 submasters and found that in order for the "next" wash to turn off the 1st one, I had to start a wash using the run button and then hit the stop button for that wash before starting another wash with the run button of another submaster. This seemed really awkward from an operational standpoint but I assigned a seperate keyboard shortcut for each submaster run and the same keyboard shortcut (the ESC key) to all submaster stops. Still a bit awkward to have to hit 2 keys for each scene but that seemed like the only way to make it work.
So then I decided to show a friend of mine what I was dealing with. I turned on my laptop, loaded Freestyler, hit the shortcut to start a red wash and then hit ESC. The wash went dark - it didnt do that when I hit the stop key on screeen with my mouse but it did when I hit the shortcut key assigned to stop. I then noticed that if I hit the shortcut key to turn on the red wash and then hit the shortcut key to turn on the blue wash (without hitting ESC in between) it turned off the reds and brought up the blues - all with just 1 key. This is exactly what I want it to do but it wouldn't do it WITH THE SUBMASTER TOOL OPEN - thats the trick... If the submaster tool is open in Freestyler, I have to run and then stop a submaster before running another submaster. If I dont hit stop on the first one it keeps running alongside the next one. If I dont have the submaster tool open, I dont have to manually stop the 1st submaster before starting the next one....
I guess its fine that it works that way but; is that by design? Why does it work that way? Also, does that mean that I need to be real careful about editing things during an actual performance? If I decide to change a submaster for instance, will I have to run and stop each scene while I have the submaster tool open but not when I close it?
I hope this makes sense and I appreciate any help - thanks!
Jeff
So then I decided to show a friend of mine what I was dealing with. I turned on my laptop, loaded Freestyler, hit the shortcut to start a red wash and then hit ESC. The wash went dark - it didnt do that when I hit the stop key on screeen with my mouse but it did when I hit the shortcut key assigned to stop. I then noticed that if I hit the shortcut key to turn on the red wash and then hit the shortcut key to turn on the blue wash (without hitting ESC in between) it turned off the reds and brought up the blues - all with just 1 key. This is exactly what I want it to do but it wouldn't do it WITH THE SUBMASTER TOOL OPEN - thats the trick... If the submaster tool is open in Freestyler, I have to run and then stop a submaster before running another submaster. If I dont hit stop on the first one it keeps running alongside the next one. If I dont have the submaster tool open, I dont have to manually stop the 1st submaster before starting the next one....
I guess its fine that it works that way but; is that by design? Why does it work that way? Also, does that mean that I need to be real careful about editing things during an actual performance? If I decide to change a submaster for instance, will I have to run and stop each scene while I have the submaster tool open but not when I close it?
I hope this makes sense and I appreciate any help - thanks!
Jeff