Grand MA2 Help Page: Difference between revisions

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5. this will open the fixture wizard
5. this will open the fixture wizard


6. specify the type of fixture that you want to patch by default it will have just two options available a generic dimmer personality a button that says from library which will bring up the fixture library
6. specify the type of fixture that you want to patch by default it will have just two options available a generic dimmer personality a button that says from the library which will bring up the fixture library


7. once you have specified the type of fixture that you want to patch it will provide you with a green form to fill in
7. once you have specified the type of fixture that you want to patch it will provide you with a green form to fill in
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you can also specify either fixture id numbers and channel numbers or one or the other
you can also specify either fixture id numbers and channel numbers or one or the other
the next option is patch break 1 this is the universe and address box.
the next option is patch break 1 this is the universe and address box.
once you are happy with your patching press the apply button this ensures that the desk saves your patch
once you are happy with your patching press the apply button  
no changes are made until you press the close button the console will give you a pop-up to say you are leaving the patch & fixture schedule do you want to save changes if you press yes the desk will save your patch


==Stage view==
==Stage view==

Revision as of 13:53, 11 February 2023

Macros

Presets

what is a preset

a preset is a space on the console to store information for instance gobos, intensity, colour and position

presets are a valuable tool for speeding up your programming

any preset that you program into cues the console will remember the preset that was used it will automatically update the cues if you change the contents of the presets

the cues reference the preset

to create a preset

1. select some fixtures 2. give them the data that you want 3. open a preset pool in a view 4. press store and press an empty preset 5. label the presets

updating a preset process

1. starting from a cleared programmer press the clear button three times 2. select your fixtures and turn them on 3. recall the preset by pressing it 4. make the desired changes 5. press the update button 6. check the correct preset has appeared on the screen 7. press the update preset button to confirm

Patching

user profile

the user profile allows the programmer to keep their settings and views that are personal to them. when you move to new consoles you can import your user profile into the console this ensures that any time the default settings are changed or you store a view it can be reused again in the future

setup menu

the setup menu is divided up into 4 headings these are: show, console, user and network

patching patching is the process of telling the console which fixtures you are going to use you can tell it the fixture type, and the DMX Address and give them identity numbers the window is broken into two halves

on one side we have layers layers are a way of organizing your patch you could use layers to separate them out by fixture type or by location based on where they are in the rig when you select a layer the right-hand side will display the contents of the layer this is the actual patch layers a vital tool for a good MA programmer as they enable them to separate out the patch into easier-to-read sections

patching a step-by-step guide

1. press setup

2. select patch & fixture schedule

3. when you have no layers and you've got an empty show file the console will prompt you to create a new layer

4. name the layer e.g generics or dimmers.

5. this will open the fixture wizard

6. specify the type of fixture that you want to patch by default it will have just two options available a generic dimmer personality a button that says from the library which will bring up the fixture library

7. once you have specified the type of fixture that you want to patch it will provide you with a green form to fill in

you can name your fixtures from this form MA has a dual numbering system these are fixture id and channel id by default generic fixtures will be patched with channel ids not fixture ids moving lights will have fixture ids you can also specify either fixture id numbers and channel numbers or one or the other the next option is patch break 1 this is the universe and address box. once you are happy with your patching press the apply button no changes are made until you press the close button the console will give you a pop-up to say you are leaving the patch & fixture schedule do you want to save changes if you press yes the desk will save your patch

Stage view

controlling fixtures

Layout view

Sequences

Editing cues

Tracking

Chasers and Off

MA Tricks

Executor Functions

Effects Part 1

list the effect attributes and what they do

Forms

Speed

Low and High

Phase

Width

PWM

Attack and Decay

Absolute and Relative Effects

An a in the top right of the effect in the effects pool means it is an Absolute effect an R in the top right of the effect in the effects pool means it is a Relative effect

Groups, Blocks and Wings

Shuffle Selection order

Labelling Effects

Copy an Effect

Storing an Effect into a Cue

the effect control bar

creating a sequence with effects

Effects Part 2

selective and template effects when you select fixtures prior to creating the effect and these fixtures are stored in the effect it makes it a selective effect if you don't select any fixtures when you create an effect then you create a template effect and it can be applied to any fixture providing they share the same attributes

executor options

Filters & Masks

Blind Freeze preview