I am new to all this and am guessing that 8 Chauvet SlimPAR RGBA LEDs, equally spaced along a 20ft truss 10ft in front of the stage and 14ft above the stage floor will give a fairly even coverage. The 3D rendering however, shows 8 distinct pools of light - the beam angle for these is 14deg.
Can someone with more experience advise if I'm going in the right direction or should I consider more "flood" like fixtures? (If so, suggestions welcome!)
I have only about an $800 budget for these fixtures.
Thanks in anticipation
Patrick
Good representation of beam width in 3D?
Re: Good representation of beam width in 3D?
3D simulation its that... SIMULATION!!! Dispertion in real life is totally differente!! more if you use fog or something like this. If you what a real-world demo... go to a music-store... actually the Chauvet's SlimPAR series are VERY powerful!
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Re: Good representation of beam width in 3D?
ZK, OK - tks for the info. Actually, yesterday saw me wobbling about up the top of a 25ft ladder with a Slimpar56 in hands and that gave quite a decent patch of light. I think the SlimPar 64s are a little tighter beam but I'm going with eight of them for starters. Worst case I can add some on the ends.
Appreciate the guidance.
I like the idea of that haze (it's a contemporary church) - can you recommend a good unit btw?
Appreciate the guidance.
I like the idea of that haze (it's a contemporary church) - can you recommend a good unit btw?
Re: Good representation of beam width in 3D?
Actually for church you can try some DIY frost filters, or some music-stores sell it... for more dispersion... fog or haze is not recomended for churchs... they don't like it... its mor for OPEN AIR Events... or big stages...
3DVIEW is a good friend when you need to program something but you don't have the lights or to review your show in the road!
3DVIEW is a good friend when you need to program something but you don't have the lights or to review your show in the road!