Using Fan 213
[1] [Thru] [5] [At] [1] <0> [Thru] [3] <0> [Fan] {Mirror} [Enter] - sets channel 1 to 30%, 2 to
20%, 3 to 10%, 4 to 20%, and 5 to 30%.
Fanning References
When fanning references, such as palettes, if there are more that 2 reference lists are used then the
data will be referenced data. The fan will be repeated if there are more channels than references.
[1] [Thru] [5] [Int Palette] [1] [Thru] [3] [Enter] - sets channel 1 to IP1, 2 to IP2, 3 to IP3, 4 to IP1,
and 5 to IP2.
If the list contains 2 or less references, fan will be set to the levels between the references as absolute
data.
[1] [Thru] [5] [Int Palette] [1] [Thru] [2] [Enter] - (Intensity palette 1 is all channels at 0% and
Intensity palette 2 is all channels set to 100%.) sets channel 1 to 0%, 2 to 25%, 3 to 50%, 4
to 75%, and 5 to 100% as absolute data.
Fanning Timing and Delays
Fanning timing and delays work exactly like fanning parameters.
[1] [Thru] [5] [Time] [6] [Thru] [1] [0] [Enter] - sets the discrete times for channel 1 to 6 seconds,
2 to 7 seconds, 3 to 8 seconds, 4 to 9 seconds, and 5 to 10 seconds.
[Cue] [1] [Thru] [5][Time] [6] [Thru] [1] [0] [Enter] - sets the times for cue 1 to 6 seconds, 2 to 7
seconds, 3 to 8 seconds, 4 to 9 seconds, and 5 to 10 seconds.
[Cue] [1] [Part] [1] [Thru] [3] [Time] [6][Thru] [8] [Enter] - sets the times for cue 1's parts to part
1 to 6 seconds, part 2 to 7 seconds, and part 3 to 8.
[1] [Thru] [5] [Delay] [6] [Thru] [8] [Fan] {Mirror} [Enter] - sets the discrete delays of channel 1 to
8 seconds, 2 to 7 seconds, 3 to 6 seconds, 4 to 7 seconds, and 5 to 8 seconds.
Using Subgroups with Fan
Subgroups (on page205) can be used with the Fan feature. Channels in the same subgroup will act
as a single channel when fanned.
For Example:
Group 1 is made up of channels 120 thru 130. Channels 120 thru 123 are one subgroup,
channels 124 thru 126 are not in any subgroup, and channels 125 thru 130 are another sub-
group.
[Group] [1] [Fan] [Enter]
Selects group 1 and puts it into fan mode. Rolling up the level wheel creates the following
result. Channels 120 thru 123 share an intensity, channels 124 thru 126 each have different
intensities, and channels 127 thru 130 share an intensity.