What did you use for the frame of this build out? I've been trying to find aluminum channeling that has different angled connectors but haven't had any luck so far. Any feedback would be greatly appreciated
It's just a wooden frame (~1/4" by 1" iirc). The whole lattice is made of a bunch of ~3' sections, that are all bolted together at each end. Wood was much cheaper than any alternative (looked at lots of options for steel, aluminum, plastic, etc). It isn't the most structurally sound and wouldn't stand up on it's own, but it's very lightweight and by being flexible means it's fairly forgiving to any bending/moving in assembly.
ejectionseat thank you for that response. Super helpful. Last thing, you don’t have to answer if it’s to complicated. How did you wire your setup and get resolume to recognize that unique pattern? Are you running multiple ledmxpro 4’s? And when you’re pixel mapping, are you telling resolume that the data is moving like it would on a normal grid? Hope that’s not to confusing
@@ejectionseat i love what you did here! I would also be interested in details about the complete wire setup including power supply (PC, LeDMX 4 Pro, LED Strips, ...) and the setup in Resolume. Did you do it like this? resolume.com/support/en/dmx#sending-dmx-to-your-led-lights Your blog is already very helpful! Would love to have a part-list of all necessary things to buy as well (LeDMX 4, LED Strip Type?, Power Supplies, ...)
Спасибо, вы сделали очень хорошее видео!
De donde conseguiste esos efectos??
Cool!
This is dope, will you ever do a setup video showing how to program the ledmx4 and how to output in resolume?
this is awesome, do you have any tutorials/links to make something like this??
What did you use for the frame of this build out? I've been trying to find aluminum channeling that has different angled connectors but haven't had any luck so far. Any feedback would be greatly appreciated
It's just a wooden frame (~1/4" by 1" iirc). The whole lattice is made of a bunch of ~3' sections, that are all bolted together at each end. Wood was much cheaper than any alternative (looked at lots of options for steel, aluminum, plastic, etc). It isn't the most structurally sound and wouldn't stand up on it's own, but it's very lightweight and by being flexible means it's fairly forgiving to any bending/moving in assembly.
ejectionseat thank you for that response. Super helpful. Last thing, you don’t have to answer if it’s to complicated. How did you wire your setup and get resolume to recognize that unique pattern? Are you running multiple ledmxpro 4’s? And when you’re pixel mapping, are you telling resolume that the data is moving like it would on a normal grid? Hope that’s not to confusing
@@scottyocum6363 Take a look here for a bit more detail about the setup: backyardcolor.blogspot.com/2019/05/lights-smpte-action.html.
Let me know if there's still questions after that
@@ejectionseat i love what you did here! I would also be interested in details about the complete wire setup including power supply (PC, LeDMX 4 Pro, LED Strips, ...) and the setup in Resolume. Did you do it like this? resolume.com/support/en/dmx#sending-dmx-to-your-led-lights
Your blog is already very helpful! Would love to have a part-list of all necessary things to buy as well (LeDMX 4, LED Strip Type?, Power Supplies, ...)