james_ Posted July 1, 2022 Report Posted July 1, 2022 Hi may I have some help I accidentally factory reset my Flx s 24 And I have lost everything and I have to do everything from scratch and I’m not sure what to do can anyone help please Quote
DALX Posted July 1, 2022 Report Posted July 1, 2022 There are training videos on the Zero88 Youtube channel https://www.youtube.com/user/zero88 , some cover FLX and FLXS. I have attached a quick guide I wrote for year 10 production students that covers most used items when they are starting to use a FLXS24. FLXS24 SHOW GUIDE.pdf 1 Quote
james_ Posted July 1, 2022 Author Report Posted July 1, 2022 I’ve looked at your guide but one of the problems is the lights aren’t turning on by using a fader Quote
kgallen Posted July 1, 2022 Report Posted July 1, 2022 Did you save to USB stick? If not then yes you will have lost your programming. Quote
Edward Z88 Posted July 1, 2022 Report Posted July 1, 2022 Hi @james_ 5 hours ago, james_ said: I’ve looked at your guide but one of the problems is the lights aren’t turning on by using a fader If you haven’t saved your show file to a USB drive prior to resetting the console, you will need to patch it. Otherwise the console won’t know what lights you have. See the link below for information on adding lights into your console… https://zero88.com/manuals/zeros/patching/add-fixtures Hope this helps, Edward Quote Edward Smith Product Specialist Email Support
Davidmk Posted July 2, 2022 Report Posted July 2, 2022 That depends on the fixture. A lot of fixtures have a display that shows their address when they are powered up - these are the the easy ones. Some have displays but show nothing when they are powered up (or they display something that isn't the address) - these you will have to go into the menu on the fixture and find the address. Lastly there are ones without a display that have a row of tiny 'DIP' switches - these actually represent the address in binary, usually with the least significant bit on the left. It really is a nightmare and I'm pretty sure you will be saving your showfile at every turn in future. One thought, is the desk used by anyone else who might have saved a showfile? If so, you can load that - there are options for how much of it you want to load or you can .old the whole lot and delete stuff you don't want. Quote
james_ Posted July 2, 2022 Author Report Posted July 2, 2022 The lights are on lx bars and I’m trying to find the dmx number of that Quote
iank99 Posted July 2, 2022 Report Posted July 2, 2022 7 hours ago, james_ said: The lights are on lx bars and I’m trying to find the dmx number of that Are the lights "intelligent" i.e. do they move around or have LED's that light up to change the colour they produce? If they're conventional lights like fresnels & profiles that take a lamp then they will be connected to some form of dimmer and that will have the address you need. Usually the dimmer address will be set via an LCD Keypanel, front panel rotary switches or internal DIP switches. If your installation is the latter then a simple 1 to 1 patch might suffice to get things running e.g. DMX channel 1 is patched to Desk Channel 1, DMX 2 to 2 and so on. Quote Ian Knight aka The Service Guy - www.serviceguy.co.uk
Davidmk Posted July 2, 2022 Report Posted July 2, 2022 You need a lot of information to do a patch. Once you know what fixtures you have and their addresses the actual patching is pretty straightforward. If the desk was patched before then someone must have done it. They may have a showfile. If not they must have had the information you need. They should be able to help - are you able to contact them? Failing that. What is your situation? Is this a school, a community theatre, etc? Is there a tech responsible for it, other users, etc, who may have showfiles? They may even be on this forum but not realise it's "their" venue. Where are you? Another forum member may be close by - it would help avoid us asking lots of questions if someone experienced could take a look in person. 1 Quote
james_ Posted July 4, 2022 Author Report Posted July 4, 2022 It’s a school the old technician set it up then they left and the school hired me and I don’t have the show file Quote
KWR88 Posted July 4, 2022 Report Posted July 4, 2022 Hi James, Do you know who did the original installation? They may have the details on the setup. There would normally have been a handover documents giving this information as well. May have mention but what fixtures do you actually have, are they LED, moving heads, normal tungsten lights, or a mixture of them. For tungsten lights then these will be control via a dimmer. if you can locate that we can work out what the address is and set the desk up accordingly. For LED or moving head, you would have to look at each fixture to get the required information from them. You will need the following information, if you can get that then either email me or call me on the details in my sign off and i will walk you through what you need to do. Manufacture name. Model of fixture. Mode it is set to. DMX address. 1 Quote Regards, Keith Rogers Zero 88 Support: support@zero88.com
Davidmk Posted July 4, 2022 Report Posted July 4, 2022 Ouch. OK, so there's no quick or easy fix for this, at least not if you have any fixtures that are not connected to dimmers. I'm guessing you aren't a specialist theatre technician either so I'll keep this simple. Before you can start patching, you need to know what you have to patch. Unless your school is surprisingly state of the art I'd expect most of your fixtures are plugged into dimmers. These will just have a power lead - no DMX connection so you can probably spot them from ground level. If they are all like that then you can breathe a sigh of relief, 90% of the problem has gone away. First off, find your dimmers. In a school, I'd expect to find a number of boxes looking something like this (which is the newest version, preceded by 3 previous generations). Of course it may not be Zero88 - other manufacturers, including Strand, made similar products (i.e. a box with a dozen sockets on the front with some sort of control/fuse/circuit breaker panel alongside). There will be a very thick power cable going into the box and a thinner control cable. You might find things like this instead - smaller boxes, less sockets but still with a mains cable and a control cable. Look at the plug on the thin control cable if it is a 3 or 5 pin XLR then your dimmers are (probably) DMX controlled - follow that control cable back, it should go to the desk, possibly via a section buried in the wall. It may go to another dimmer box, if it does then follow the control cable going into that until you get to the first one (the one where the cable goes somewhere else). If that first connection does go to the desks then smile and skip the next 2 paragraphs. You may have hardwired dimmers like these but, as it's a school I feel it's unlikely. If you have then what follows still applies (sort of) but you won't be able to see or follow the wires. If you are in this situation try and establish the make/model if your dimmers and come back. If, however, the control cable is an XLR but it goes to a different kind of box (not dimmers) you need to identify what that box is. One with a network connection might be an ArtNet node. No network connection but two incoming XLRs and one outgoing is possibly a DMX merger. No network, one incoming XLR and two or more outlet sockets is probably a DMX splitter. All of these are good, they may give you headaches in the future but not with this issue. Skip the next paragraph. If aren't skipping this paragraph then you probably have (very) old analogue dimmers, probably using non-XLR connectors. This sort of connection means there must be one or more DMX to analogue converters sitting between them and the desk. These will have an address, probably set with rotary or DIP switches. You can follow the next paragraph to establish what the addresses are but look at the converter boxes, not the dimmers. First, take a moment to contemplate the level of spending on such things in education and to check that the dimmers at least have reasonably recent PAT test stickers and make suitable arrangements if they haven't after all they have to be multiple decades old. Yo can also marvel at how good the engineering was that they have survived so long. OK so now you have one or more boxes that have addresses, you just need to know what they are. Ideally you should have the manual and you may be able to get it from the manufacturer's website or somewhere like manualslib. If you can't find the manual then look carefully at the dimmer/converter box. There may be a display of some sort, even better it may display a number between 1 and 512 when powered up - good chance that this is the address. If not then you may have to start pressing buttons - go have another look for the manual, you don't want to change anything by mistake. Failing that there may be rotary switches and you can read the address from them. Finally, there may be DIP switches - you can read about them here but essentially the switches give you the address in binary. Having got the addresses count how many dimmers you have on each address. A box with 12 sockets but only 6 breakers/fuses probably has 6 dimmers so patch 6 dimmers starting from the address on the box. Again the manual could be of help here. If you don't have any fixtures that have DMX input then you are done. If you do then you will need to identify what you have (exact make and model) and try to find the manuals online. You will also need the addresses and the modes they are set to so get the Tallescope/Zarges/scaff-tower out and go climbing. Similar things apply to finding the address as it does with dimmers. If you get stuck come back to the forum with at least a list of make and model. I see Keith at Z88 has made a shorter reply. If anything I've said contradicts him then assume he is right not me. No apologies for the length of this reply though - I have tried to cover most of the things you might encounter at a basic level and that takes a lot of words 😀 3 Quote
kgallen Posted July 4, 2022 Report Posted July 4, 2022 Without wishing to short-circuit @Davidmk 's excellent response, once you've gotten your head around the structure of the system it would be worth patching say 48 "dimmers" on the desk and seeing what (if anything) responds to channels 1 thru as-high-as-you-fancy. There is a high chance that conventional dimmers will start at address 1. Of course to do that you need to have located the supply isolation for the dimmers and any other kit rigged, which is the opening part of @Davidmk's reply. @james_ letting us know where you are geographically would help too. You don't need to give out the name of the school publicly on here. A city/town would do for a start. Best of all, add it to your Forum profile. Also I'm with @KWR88, if this was a professional install, there must be some sort of documentation somewhere. Only the most cowboy of installers would have left you with absolutely nothing. Roughly how old is the install? (1-2 years, 5, 10 years, 20 years???) Are there stickers anywhere for the installer/supplier who should have some records of the main info we need here - accepting some details of the install/kit might have been changed post the install date. 1 Quote
Davidmk Posted July 4, 2022 Report Posted July 4, 2022 3 minutes ago, kgallen said: letting us know where you are geographically would help too Very true. If you are in Milton Keynes I could probably pop over tomorrow. Anywhere near but not in MK would have to wait until Thursday. 1 Quote
Davidmk Posted July 4, 2022 Report Posted July 4, 2022 6 minutes ago, kgallen said: it would be worth patching say 48 "dimmers" That too is a good idea. Not systematic but a good start. As long things are powered up of course. 1 Quote
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