avolites pearl exper ttitan ユーザーズマニュアル

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Copyright Avolites Limited 2010
Page 72 – 6. Cues
 
 
 
 
PearlExpertTitan_Man_v3.doc  29/03/2010 13:28:00 
while pressing the last in the range. 
4>  Press the empty Swop button where you want it to go. 
• 
The Menu Latch button latches the Copy/Move/Link menu, so 
you can keep copying, moving or linking things without having 
to keep pressing the Copy button. Press Exit to unlatch. 
• 
[Retain Layout] or [Bunch Up] is used when copying a group of 
cues with empty playbacks in the group – you can either keep 
the empty playbacks, or bunch up the used playbacks together. 
• 
When in Copy mode, option [Copy Legends] can be changed to 
[Don’t copy legends] so that the copied cues are given default 
legends. 
• 
When in Move mode, [Swap Items if Required] will attempt to 
reposition any existing playbacks which are in the way of the 
move. This is useful when rearranging playbacks on a page 
which is nearly full. 
6.5 
Delete 
6.5.1 
Deleting a cue 
To delete a cue: 
1>  Press the blue Delete button. 
2>  Press the Swop button of the cue you want to delete. 
3>  Press the Swop button again to confirm the delete. 
• 
Press ML Menu to keep the delete mode active. You can keep 
deleting using steps 2 and 3 without having to keep pressing 
the Delete button. Press Exit to leave latched delete mode. 
6.6 
Timing 
The Pearl allows a wide variety of timing functions to be set. 
6.6.1 
Setting fade times and Overlap for a cue 
You can set a delay, fade in and fade out time independently for 
every cue. Shapes in the cue will also be affected, depending on the 
fade mode. 
You can delay the fade times between fixtures in a cue so that the 
cue is applied sequentially to each fixture. This is called Fixture 
Overlap and can create some amazing “peel off” or “roll” type effects 
with no programming at all. 
In the diagram below, the top picture shows how the LTP channels 
change when used with delay, fade and fade out times. The second 
picture shows how the HTP channels change. The third and fourth 
pictures show what happens to the LTP channels when fixture overlap 
and attribute fade are used.