Is there anyway to program a submaster with a starting value and ending value?

 I'm very new to these types of consoles.  I normally run movers etc from ShowXpress.  Although people tell me the ETC consoles are much easier to program, I find myself having a heck of a time figuring it out.

I watched all the videos on youtube for the Element and downloaded the Offline system, but I'm still having a hard time.

I thought by watching all these videos and taking copious notes, I had a handle on how to use the system, boy was I ever wrong.

Yesterday I actually got to sit in front of and program a show for a dance recital.  What a nightmare that was.  That's another story though.  I will say that those red tombstone numbers were almost the death of me.

So now to my actual question.  Is there anyway to program a sub with a starting value and an ending value.  We had one look that used incandescent lights and I was finding that nothing would really appear on stage til they hit about 21%.

After hitting the blackout button, sliding the sub all the way down, hitting the blackout button again, I would then move the slider to 20%, essentially starting at the bottom where moving the sub up would have an immediate effect on the light.

I was thinking to myself if there was some sort of way to tell the sub, start at 20% and go thru to 100%, this would have made life a lot easier.

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  • What you're seeing is not a function of the console, but a result of the way the tungsten filaments of the lights work.
    It takes a moment for the element to warm up and begin to cast light from a zero state. If you're cutting through other light, this could be exactly what you saw.

    There is a function called Preheat that would do what you ask, but it's a bit complicated and a Setting, not something to change mid-show.

    I'm not a fan of doing what you ask, but if I were to do it, I would record those values in a separate submaster and leave that "preheat 20% level" submaster up all of the time.
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  • What you're seeing is not a function of the console, but a result of the way the tungsten filaments of the lights work.
    It takes a moment for the element to warm up and begin to cast light from a zero state. If you're cutting through other light, this could be exactly what you saw.

    There is a function called Preheat that would do what you ask, but it's a bit complicated and a Setting, not something to change mid-show.

    I'm not a fan of doing what you ask, but if I were to do it, I would record those values in a separate submaster and leave that "preheat 20% level" submaster up all of the time.
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