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Author Topic: Sizing audience Blinders  (Read 4974 times)

Joe Pieternella

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Sizing audience Blinders
« on: January 16, 2019, 06:34:29 AM »

I'm looking to build upon/replace my current lighting gear. You may say that apart from stands, cabling and trussing I'm starting from scratch.
Apart from budget my main limitation is available power; I'm often lucky if I get a dedicated EU(230V) 16A circuit to run sound and light equipment from.

The current plan is to get 8-12 LED Washes, 2 Movers and later some color/white bars that may or may not double as blinders. 

I'm looking to get some audience blinders and am kinda stuck here.
I do prefer the way halogen bulbs fade but because of the power limitations don't consider them as an option.

Are there any rules of thumb for determining the amount of Lumens/Watts/blinders needed especially when Using LEDs?
At what kind of Lux do blinders go from blinders to just-a-bunch-of-lights?
Will 2-4 of these give a statisfactory effect at 15-20M or am I being very optimistic here?

https://www.cameolight.com/en/products/led-strobes/flash-bar-150-3-in-1-strobe-chase-and-blinder-effect-fixture/

I am open to other suggestions on light bars provided with a budget of max 250 per fixture, and want to have acceptable results with two fixtures so i can have breathing room until buying the other 2
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Taylor Hall

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Re: Sizing audience Blinders
« Reply #1 on: January 16, 2019, 01:53:10 PM »

The great thing about LEDs is that they punch way above their weight when power draw is considered. Being in the UK also works in your favor with the higher voltage.

As far as lux is concerned, I'm not really sure where that target lies. Most small LED pars that aren't COB seem to sit around 900-1500lux depending on the qty and intensity of emitters they cram in there (lots of tiny emitters vs a few high output emitters).

I wouldn't discount the idea of getting a lot of "normal" LED pars that are used for impact effects only. Attached is a photo of what 10 LED pars from Parts Express do to a wall roughly 25m away and their output is on the lower end of the aforementioned range. We aimed them up over the heads of the audience because we found their output to be very dazzling even when they were lifted 7m above the stage. We rarely run them at full intensity unless we know the room will have ambient lighting during the show.
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Jeff Lelko

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Re: Sizing audience Blinders
« Reply #2 on: January 16, 2019, 03:19:02 PM »

Hi Joe, a few thoughts...

I do prefer the way halogen bulbs fade but because of the power limitations don't consider them as an option.

LEDs have come a long ways in the past few years.  I've historically been in the anti-LED camp for many things, but there are a number of acceptable LED blinders on the market today - many of which emulate the halogen decay seen in conventional blinders.  As always, you get what you pay for. 

At what kind of Lux do blinders go from blinders to just-a-bunch-of-lights?

I'd argue that Lux doesn't apply here since you're not really illuminating a surface.  At what point a blinder shifts from making you see spots to just being another fixture varies, but from what you describe I don't think you need anything crazy.  Even cheap LED fixtures tend to look decently bright when staring straight into them, let alone dedicated blinders.  Seeing as you're spec'ing a very small system with a limited budget, I've vote to add 2-4 more of the washes you're planning to buy and just use them as blinders.  If your washes have white and amber in them that's even better.  I see that as added bang to buck since you'll benefit from additional flexibility and redundancy compared to spending the same $$$ on dedicated blinders.  Hope this helps!
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Jay Barracato

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Re: Sizing audience Blinders
« Reply #3 on: January 16, 2019, 03:23:33 PM »

The great thing about LEDs is that they punch way above their weight when power draw is considered. Being in the UK also works in your favor with the higher voltage.

As far as lux is concerned, I'm not really sure where that target lies. Most small LED pars that aren't COB seem to sit around 900-1500lux depending on the qty and intensity of emitters they cram in there (lots of tiny emitters vs a few high output emitters).

I wouldn't discount the idea of getting a lot of "normal" LED pars that are used for impact effects only. Attached is a photo of what 10 LED pars from Parts Express do to a wall roughly 25m away and their output is on the lower end of the aforementioned range. We aimed them up over the heads of the audience because we found their output to be very dazzling even when they were lifted 7m above the stage. We rarely run them at full intensity unless we know the room will have ambient lighting during the show.
I'm looking to build upon/replace my current lighting gear. You may say that apart from stands, cabling and trussing I'm starting from scratch.
Apart from budget my main limitation is available power; I'm often lucky if I get a dedicated EU(230V) 16A circuit to run sound and light equipment from.

The current plan is to get 8-12 LED Washes, 2 Movers and later some color/white bars that may or may not double as blinders. 

I'm looking to get some audience blinders and am kinda stuck here.
I do prefer the way halogen bulbs fade but because of the power limitations don't consider them as an option.

Are there any rules of thumb for determining the amount of Lumens/Watts/blinders needed especially when Using LEDs?
At what kind of Lux do blinders go from blinders to just-a-bunch-of-lights?
Will 2-4 of these give a statisfactory effect at 15-20M or am I being very optimistic here?

https://www.cameolight.com/en/products/led-strobes/flash-bar-150-3-in-1-strobe-chase-and-blinder-effect-fixture/

I am open to other suggestions on light bars provided with a budget of max 250 per fixture, and want to have acceptable results with two fixtures so i can have breathing room until buying the other 2
Blizzard snowblind was what I ended up with.

https://www.blizzardpro.com/products/snowblind

Sent from my Moto Z (2) using Tapatalk

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Jay Barracato

Tim Weaver

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Re: Sizing audience Blinders
« Reply #4 on: January 17, 2019, 01:23:06 PM »

If you get a COB led blinder in warm white and with the "fade" effect which mimics a filamient fading out you basically can't tell the difference between those and a real blinder like a molefay.

Something along these lines...
https://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/1387912-REG/american_dj_encore_burst_200.html/?ap=y&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIvdzqmbf13wIVzbbACh1mJwB8EAQYAyABEgKAY_D_BwE&lsft=BI%3A514&smp=Y


The dim to warm effect means it gets warmer as it fades out to mimic a filament light. Just about everybody makes a light like this and believe me they are bright enough!
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Joe Pieternella

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Re: Sizing audience Blinders
« Reply #5 on: January 19, 2019, 07:02:00 AM »

Being in the UK also works in your favor with the higher voltage.

I wouldn't discount the idea of getting a lot of "normal" LED pars that are used for impact effects only. Attached is a photo of what 10 LED pars from Parts Express do to a wall roughly 25m away and their output is on the lower end of the aforementioned range.
Actually from the Netherlands. The higher power draw available per circuit is a double edged sword; great when you can get a dedicated circuit, but because there is so much available a lot of low end venues don't install a dedicated circuit.

Blizzard snowblind was what I ended up with.

Those Blizzard fixtures look nice, unfortunately I didn't see them for sale in europe and they don't seem to take 230V anyway.

I've vote to add 2-4 more of the washes you're planning to buy and just use them as blinders.  If your washes have white and amber in them that's even better.  I see that as added bang to buck since you'll benefit from additional flexibility and redundancy compared to spending the same $$$ on dedicated blinders.  Hope this helps!
I'll Look into this option  although I'd rather get something that is/looks bigger than two PARs on a truss

@Tim
Thanks,although the ADJ one is a little over budget for me. I believe renting something similar totest is in order here.


For now apart from the colour temperature I am pretty confident the fixture I linked in the first post or similar should fit the bill. Maybe even several like the Blizzard Snowblind
However If there is anyone that might wanna share how they determine how much is enough/needed  apart from maybe coverage angles or if everybody is just adding blinders until they run out of fixtures/Truss/Power that would still be of great help.
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Tim Weaver

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Re: Sizing audience Blinders
« Reply #6 on: January 19, 2019, 02:07:08 PM »

Actually from the Netherlands. The higher power draw available per circuit is a double edged sword; great when you can get a dedicated circuit, but because there is so much available a lot of low end venues don't install a dedicated circuit.
Those Blizzard fixtures look nice, unfortunately I didn't see them for sale in europe and they don't seem to take 230V anyway.
I'll Look into this option  although I'd rather get something that is/looks bigger than two PARs on a truss

@Tim
Thanks,although the ADJ one is a little over budget for me. I believe renting something similar totest is in order here.


For now apart from the colour temperature I am pretty confident the fixture I linked in the first post or similar should fit the bill. Maybe even several like the Blizzard Snowblind
However If there is anyone that might wanna share how they determine how much is enough/needed  apart from maybe coverage angles or if everybody is just adding blinders until they run out of fixtures/Truss/Power that would still be of great help.

What size venue will you be using these in? I tried some of the snowblind fixtures and in smaller spaces they worked fine, but in large venues or outdoors they just looked like more twinkly lights. Not really blinders..
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Jeff Lelko

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Re: Sizing audience Blinders
« Reply #7 on: January 19, 2019, 05:30:52 PM »

I'll Look into this option  although I'd rather get something that is/looks bigger than two PARs on a truss

...

However If there is anyone that might wanna share how they determine how much is enough/needed  apart from maybe coverage angles or if everybody is just adding blinders until they run out of fixtures/Truss/Power that would still be of great help.

That's a fair statement, though your budget might restrict you here.  The Chauvet Strike 4 has much more of a traditional blinder look, but is far beyond your budget.  Out of curiosity, why not try to find a halogen blinder that fits within your wattage range?  They're dirt cheap these days, and if the rest of your rig is only at most a dozen LED Pars and 2 moving lights I'd have to think you won't need that much. 

How much is needed depends on a few variables - mostly what the artistic look of the lighting design calls for, and if you just want added light for emphasis/excitement or if it needs to be bright enough to make everyone see spots.  I usually demo the fixtures I'm interested in.  Also, depending on the desired effect you want to take the output of the rest of your lighting into consideration too.  A 300w blinder looks great in a small venue, but not buried next to a bunch of Mac 2Ks in an outdoor amphitheater! 
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Scott Holtzman

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Re: Sizing audience Blinders
« Reply #8 on: January 20, 2019, 02:10:26 AM »

I have some pulse 16x3w fixtures that are very similar to the Snowblinds.  10 of them made an ok blinder effect for about 3000 on an ampitheater gig.  I Will find some video from FOH that was about 150ft from stage and post.

IMHO the Blizzard Solar cell is more similar to the Chauvet and more expensive!

You can get decent. 4 x 100w COB generic fixtures for aboit $200.00

Here you go,  you can see the blinders used in these video's https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=2107783575930275&id=100000959604738

Sent from my VS996 using Tapatalk

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Scott AKA "Skyking" Holtzman

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Tim Weaver

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Re: Sizing audience Blinders
« Reply #9 on: January 20, 2019, 08:19:44 AM »

I have some pulse 16x3w fixtures that are very similar to the Snowblinds.  10 of them made an ok blinder effect for about 3000 on an ampitheater gig.  I Will find some video from FOH that was about 150ft from stage and post.

IMHO the Blizzard Solar cell is more similar to the Chauvet and more expensive!

You can get decent. 4 x 100w COB generic fixtures for aboit $200.00

Here you go,  you can see the blinders used in these video's https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=2107783575930275&id=100000959604738

Sent from my VS996 using Tapatalk

For the other side of the coin, we had 4 of the Dual 100 watt COB fixtures like the ADJ I linked to above. Ours were generic chinese versions and are unfortunately discontinued now.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TVDVELcrMo0

The blinders are located at the top of the towers, one per tower. The movers on the towers are Chauvet Legend 412's, and the rear truss had platinum 5R fixtures. I think they were the 5R spots iirc.
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ProSoundWeb Community

Re: Sizing audience Blinders
« Reply #9 on: January 20, 2019, 08:19:44 AM »


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