Blizzard Lighting ToughPAR (Rev A) User Manual

Page 8

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Page 8

ToughPAR 1 Manual Rev. A

Copyright (c) 2011 Blizzard Lighting, LLC

Cable Connectors

Cables must have a male XLR connector on one end and a female XLR

connector on the other end. (Duh!)

CAUTION: Do not allow contact between the common and the fi x-

ture’s chassis ground. Grounding the common can cause a ground

loop, and your fi xture may perform erratically. Test cables with an

ohm meter to verify correct polarity and to make sure the pins are not

grounded or shorted to the shield or each other.

3-Pin??? 5-Pin??? Huh?!?

If you use a controller with a 5 pin DMX output connector, you will need to use a 5 pin to 3 pin adapter.

They are widely available over the internet and from specialty retailers If you’d like to build your own, the

chart below details a proper cable conversion:

Conductor

3-Pin Female

(Output)

5-Pin Male

(Input)

Ground/Shield

Pin 1

Pin 1

DMX Data (-)

Pin 2

Pin 2

DMX Data (+)

Pin 3

Pin 3

Not Used.

No Connection.

No Connection.

Not Used.

No Connection.

No Connection.

Take It To The Next Level: Setting Up DMX Control

Step 1: Connect the male connector of the

DMX cable to the female connector (output)

on the controller.

Step 2: Connect the female connector of the

DMX cable to the fi rst fi xture’s male connec-

tor (input). Note: It doesn’t matter which

fi xture address is the fi rst one connected.

We recommend connecting the fi xtures in

terms of their proximity to the controller,

rather than connecting the lowest fi xture

number fi rst, and so on.

Step 3: Connect other fi xtures in the chain

from output to input as above. Place a DMX

terminator on the output of the fi nal fi xture

to ensure best communication.

Page 13

ToughPAR 1 Manual Rev. A

Copyright (c) 2011 Blizzard Lighting, LLC

The ID Address Feature

The ID Address feature available on the ToughPAR 1 is a powerful tool which

when utilized gives you the capability to control up to 64 fi xtures set to the

same DMX address either as one fi xture, or independently. This effectively in-

creases the number of ToughPARs available in 1 DMX universe from 56 to 3,584

in 56 groups of 64 ID addressed fi xtures. Whoa!

For instance, in an environment with 12 ToughPAR 1s grouped together into two

separate master groups of 6 fi xtures each:

Group 1’s fi xtures are set to DMX address 1. Group 2’s fi xtures are set 9 ad-

dresses higher, at DMX address 10. Each group’s fi xtures are set to different

ID addresses using the fi xture’s 9th channel. This gives the user independent

control over each fi xture as long as each DMX message includes a different ID

address (channel 9) value.

For instance, if we wanted to change the green value of only fi xture ID 2 of

group 1, we would change DMX channel 3 while channel 9 was set to “2.”

Similarly, if we wanted to adjust the green value of fi xture ID 5 of group 1, we

would change DMX channel 3 while channel 9 was set to “5.”

If we wanted to change the green value of fi xture ID 2 of group 2, we would

change DMX channel 12 while channel 18 was set to “2.” (The 3rd channel is

green; since fi xture group 2 starts with DMX channel 10, green is channel 12).

If we wanted to change the green value of ALL of group 1, we would adjust

channel 3 while channel 9 was set to “0.” Similarly if we wanted to adjust the

green value of ALL of group 2, we would adjust channel 12 while channel 18

was set to “0.”

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