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AusChristmasLighting 101 Manual
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[QUOTE="kane, post: 42991, member: 532"] As mentioned, have a good read of the 101 manual - it'll help you out a lot with this. The CCR is 30/m from memory, and each group of 3 led's are grouped together so you can't individually control each LED. Ray has the same as this, as well as 60/m, and the choice of individual leds being controlled. Keep in mind that the CCR is an all in price - controller, power supply and strip. That is the advantage of the LOR gear - it's much more plug and play. If you're not at all inclined to use a soldering iron, then the DIY route may require you to learn a bit, but it'll certainly give you a lot better bang for your buck! (it doesn't necessarily mean you'll spend less, you'll probably be like the rest of us and end up with more stuff!) This is a how long is a piece of string question (or how long is a string of lights?) For example, if you've got 60 led/m, then you'll need to inject twice as often as 30 led/m Easiest way is to hook it all up, stick all lights on white, and see if you start to get pinkish tones at the end. If you do, then this means you need to inject power at the end. The lights linked are what we refer to as "dumb strip", where the whole strip lights up the same colour. Can be useful for some situations, just depends on what you want to do. To get these to work with LOR (or any other program), you'll need a DC controller, and a way of getting a DMX signal out from your computer to the controller (either a DMX-usb dongle, or an ethernet-dmx gateway such as a D4) Chec the wiki or 101 guide for more info on this. [/QUOTE]
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The title of our introductory lighting manual contains a three digit number. What is that number? Clue: Display basics forum
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