FX or Subs?

Our "Sound of Music" director wants a couple of inverted moving head spots with their beams "wandering" around the auditorium to emulate flashlights coming from 'Gestapo'.

Just wandering is no problem. A modified 906 (spiral) works great. BUT! Director wants to be able to have them freeze on random members of the audience for short and variable periods.

If  we used the FX to wander is there a way to freeze the focus on command and then resume on command?. (would this be a job for a 'Inhibitive sub" ?)

Or would this be better answered with each fixture's P&T in submasters so operator can pull them around, stop and restart them. (If so how do I put just P in one sub and T in another with a pair for each ML?)

Our show ops only familiar with the [Go] button I'm afraid so whatever we do it must be simple. Ideas welcome.

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  • Thanks. If I read you right then op runs the cue that starts the beams wandering and when they want to stop one hit the [Go] for new (freeze) cue and a further [Go] to resume? Interesting!

    One thing can be said is that Augment3d is great for 'seeing' these scenarios at home here. I've copied all the answers into a working document so I can investigate the different ideas posted.

  • Is there a way to freeze a specific effect (by number) in a macro and another to unfreeze? If there was I could put the macros in the MS and just tell them to press them to stop and start each lamps travels.

  • Freeze Effect 1   does what you want.   doing it again resumes the effect.

    So you can have two buttons on the sheet one for Freeze Effect 1 and the other for Freeze Effect 2

    BTW you dont actually need to use a macro with the magic sheet.

    Choose Command instead of Macro and then type in  as the target type on the drop down and then type the literal text    Freeze Effect 1 and press enter to include the enter at the end of the command then hitting the button just does that command.  For simple commands its easier than having a marco and point the button at the macro.

    Screen shot of my freeze all button  - I also have a red stop effects button hence why this is orange :)  keeps it simple for the basic operators.

  • I eventually came around a big circle and found the Freeze buttons (monkey at a typewriter!) which - you are right - work perfectly. However your note on the need for Macros is entirely new to me and I am off to experiment, This would abide by the KISS principle,

    Thanks for this Mike, My bench notes are getting bigger.!

  • Even better.. The Freeze did the trick to stop all FX. I changed text to "Freeze 1" and another button with "Freeze 2" and can now control them independently. So neat!  

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