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Intelligent lighting
A Martin MAC 550 intelligent light
Intelligent lighting refers to stage lighting that has
automated or mechanical abilities beyond those of
traditional, stationary illumination. Although the most
advanced “intelligent” lights can exhibit extraordinarily
complicated effects, most lighting technicians agree that it
is closer to “obedient” lighting since the intelligence lies
with the programmer of the show rather than the instruments
or the lighting operator. For this reason, intelligent
lighting is also known simply as automated lighting or
moving lights.
History
The first remotely controllable lighting system was the
Mac-spot, which was retrofitted onto a standard Par64 frame.
It offered remote pan and tilt control, but no other
features . The first fully controllable automated light
system was originally implemented in 1972, at the State
Theater of Basel, Switzerland with a controller that used
punched paper tape as the cue recording/playback medium - a
cumbersome, but visionary, system which was clearly ahead of
its time. Advances in memory and storage technology in the
decade that followed made the first modern computer
controlled automated stage lighting system practical in the
popular music concert industry in the early 1980s by Vari*Lite,
Morpheus Lights and other companies. As automated fixtures
gained widespread acceptance in this market they evolved and
their capabilities became more refined. These more
sophisticated automated fixtures were increasingly used in
theatre, television, and other entertainment lighting
applications.
Features
Several intelligent lights in use at a concert. Note the
white beams they produce
An automated light, properly called a luminaire, fixture or
a moving head, is a versatile and multi-function instrument
designed to replace multiple stationary lights. Depending on
the venue and application, automated luminaires can be a
versatile and economical addition to traditional lights
because, with proper programming, they can swiftly alter
many aspects of their optics, changing the “personality” of
the light very quickly. Lighting is typically pre-programmed
and played back using only simple commands, although moving
heads can be controlled “live” if the operator is
sufficiently experienced.
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Control
Moving lights are controlled in many ways. Usually the
fixtures are connected to a Lighting control console, which
outputs a control signal. This control signal sends data to
the fixture usually in one of three ways: Analogue (which
has largely been phased out), DMX (which is the industry
standard control protocol), or Ethernet Control (which is
still in development). The fixture then takes this signal
and translates it into internal signals which are sent to
the many stepper motors located inside.
XLR connectors, the most common method of controlling moving
heads. Note that these are 3-pin XLR connectors, which are
used by some manufacturers, rather than the 5-pin, which
specified by the USITT DMX-512 Standard.
The vast majority of moving heads are controlled using the
DMX protocol, usually using dedicated unshielded twisted
pair cable with 5-pin XLR connectors at the ends . Each
fixture is assigned a block of DMX channels in one of the
venue's DMX universes (a self-contained set of cables and
fixtures which can operate a maximum of 512 individual
channels). The central lighting desk transmits data on these
channels which the intelligent fixture interprets as value
settings for each of its many variables, including color,
pattern, focus, prism, pan (horizontal swing), tilt
(vertical swing), rotation speed, and animation.
Since moving heads did not attain prominence until DMX's
predecessor, analogue, had passed the zenith of its
popularity, very few moving heads use analogue control (this
is also due to crippling restrictions on bandwidth and data
transfer speeds). Some of the most modern intelligent
fixtures use RJ-45 or Ethernet cabling for data transfer,
due to the increased bandwidth available to control
increasingly complicated effects. Using the new Ethernet
technology, control surfaces are now able to control a much
larger array of automated fixtures . Because many devices
can be connected to a single network, these devices have the
ability to not only listen to a control signal from a
lighting control board, but have the ability to transmit
information back to the board and other entities on the
network. Now, it is possible for a fixture to self-diagnose
any problems, announce itself on a network, or accept
setting changes from any place on the network. Because of
the digital properties of networks, and its bit-checking
abilities, lighting control networks can now safely operate
pyrotechnic and rigging devices without threatening the
safety of performers and crews.
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Moving lights are programmed using a fixture box in ETC
light boards
Moving lights are much more difficult to program than their
analogue cousins because they have more attributes per
fixture that must be controlled. A simple conventional
lighting fixture uses only one channel of control per unit:
intensity. Everything else that the light must do is preset
by human hands (color, position, focus, etc.) An automated
lighting fixture can have as many as 30 of these control
channels. A slew of products are available on the market to
allow operators and programmers to easily control all of
these channels on multiple fixtures. Lighting boards are
still the most common control mechanism, but many
programmers have come to use computer software to do the
job. Software is now available that provides a rendered
preview of what your stage will look like once you are
actually controlling the lights. This allows programmers to
work on their show before ever entering the theater and know
what to expect when the lights are connected to their
controller. These products usually feature some method of
converting a computers USB output to a DMX output.
The latest generation of moving heads are integrating
digital projection capabilities, creating a real convergence
between lighting and video projection. These new generation
of heads do not only require to be controlled for intensity,
position and focus but will require video content control
features as well.
Construction
Intelligent fixtures usually employ compact arc lamps as
light sources. They use servo motors or, more commonly,
stepper motors connected to mechanical and optical internal
devices to manipulate the light before it emerges from the
fixture's front lens. Examples of such internal devices are:
Mechanical dimming shutters used to vary the intensity of
the light output. Mechanical dimmers are usually a specially
designed disk or a mechanical shutter.
Shutters with high speed stepper motors are used to create
strobe effects.
Color wheels with dichroic color filters used to change the
color of the beam.
Variable, incremental Cyan, Magenta and Yellow color-mixing
filters to vary beam color via subtractive color mixing.
Using this method, a much wider range of colors can be
created than is possible using single color filters.
Automated lens trains used to zoom & focus the beam; irises
are used to change the size of the beam. Some fixtures have
as many as 10 independently controlled prisms or lenses to
focus and shape the beam.
Pattern wheels with gobos and gate shutters to change the
shape of the beam or project images. Some fixtures have
motors to rotate the gobo in its housing to create spinning
effects, or use their complicated lens systems to achieve
the same effect.
Automated 4-blade framing shutters to further shape the beam
and control unwanted spill.
These fixtures also use motors to enable physical movement
of the light beam by:
Pivoting an automated mirror which reflects the beam along X
& Y axes, or
Attaching the entire fixture lens train to a yoke with
motorized pan & tilt
Note that fixtures which use the former method are not
technically “moving heads”, since the light source itself
does not move. However, the term “moving head” is used
interchangeably throughout this article.
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Usage
6 Moving Yokes Lighting up a Mirror Ball
Intelligent lights can be used wherever there is a need for
powerful lighting which must be capable of rapid and extreme
changes of mood and effects. Moving heads would, therefore,
be inappropriate in a setting which does not require strong
lighting (such as a home) or where the “quality” of the
light required does not vary excessively, although it may
need to be very strong for a venue like a stadium).
Naturally, there are exceptions to this rule, most notably
the use of enormous numbers of moving heads for epic
sporting events, such as the Commonwealth Games, where
nearly 1000 individual moving heads were used to light the
opening and closing ceremonies of the XVIII Games in
Melbourne.
Usually, however, the use of intelligent lights is confined
to theatre, concerts and nightclubs, where the versatility
of these fixtures can be utilised to its best extent. In
these applications, the uses of fixtures can be informally
grouped into two categories: active and passive (although
these are not standardised terms).
Passive use of intelligent lights involves utilizing their
versatility to perform tasks which would otherwise require
many conventional lights to accomplish. For example, six to
eight moving heads can create a textured blue “night” effect
on the stage floor while applying amber light to the actors
during one scene - this can create a sensation of dusk or
night. At the flick of a switch, the moving heads can change
to an animated red “fire” effect for the next scene.
Attempting this transition with traditional lighting
fixtures could require as many as thirty instruments. In
this circumstance, the intelligent lights are not doing
anything that could not be achieved using “dumb” fixtures,
but they dramatically reduce the number of lights needed in
a rig. Other features of moving heads, such as rotating
gobos, are also possible with conventional fixtures, but are
much easier to produce with intelligent fixtures.
The other use of intelligent lights is to perform tasks
which would otherwise require human involvement, or be
simply impossible with standard lights. For instance, a
number of moving heads producing tightly-focused, pure white
beams straight down onto the stage (especially if a smoke
machine or hazer is used to make the beams visible) will
produce a fantastic effect reminiscent of searchlights from
a helicopter. To recreate such an effect without intelligent
lights would require at least one human operator seated
directly above the stage with a followspot, which would be
prohibitively expensive and possibly unsafe.
Moving head lights are often divided into profile and wash
lights. They vary in use and functions but many companies
offer profile and wash variants of the same model of light.
Profile lights generally contain features like gobos and
prisms, whereas wash lights have simpler optics and a wider
beam aperture resulting in wider beam angle, which may be
altered by internal lenses or “frost effects”. Wash lights
are more likely to have CMY colour mixing in lower models
although it is common for top of the range profile lights to
have CMY mixing. Profile lights are generally used for their
beam effect (usually through smoke or haze) wash lights can
also be used like this or as stage wash.
A martin mac 250 entour (profile - top) and mac 250 wash)
wash - bottom).
A martin mac 250 entour (profile - top) and mac 250 wash)
wash - bottom). Notice the difference in beam
characteristics caused by the gobo of the entour and the
wider beam angle of the wash.
Debate
Not all the light fixtures that have movement can be defined
as intelligent. Basic club lighting is not controllable
other than basic on and off. This lack of features makes
them just a small step above a conventional Stage lighting
instrument
Moving mirrors are faster than moving head fixtures. However
moving heads are visually more interesting, and have a far
larger range of movement.
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