
(4 - Lighting) A group of luminaires.Ī luminaire with no lens that provides an almost parallel beam of light. (3 - Staging) A piece of wood used to join a number of flats together. (2 - Staging) A wooden strip at the bottom of a cloth to keep it straight and taut. The area from which the audience watches the production.Ī horizontal, flown rod or pole from which scenery, lighting and other equipment is hung.īells sounded front of house to warn the audience that the performance is about to begin.Īdjustable flaps on the front of a luminaire used to control the beam. The area of the stage, if any, which protrudes in front of the proscenium arch. (2 - Technical) See Amplifier.Ī unit used to increase the amplitude (e.g.

(1 - Technical) A unit of electrical current. (2 - General) A section of a production, often acts are seperated by intermissions. (1 - General) To perform a dramatic role. Therefore, these channels cannot be routed freely and do not have an output pop-up menu.Here are some terms and abbreviations which are used in the theatrical environment.Ī B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z The output busses represent the audio interface to the host application or the audio hardware. Click the output pop-up menu and select an output. OutputĮach channel can be routed to various busses. The peak level meter indicates the highest level on the bus in dB. Stereo busses have two channel meters, surround channels have six. The number of meters depends on the number of audio channels of the bus. The meters of a mixer channel show the output level of the bus.

For more detailed editing, use the Sound Editor of the Surround Panner. The mixer channel shows a small version of the Surround Panner, which can be used to remote-control the inserted surround panner. When working with surround busses, you can insert a surround panner effect to one of the insert slots of a bus and use it to pan the stereo signals in the surround field. PanĪll stereo mixer channels provide a stereo panner that allows you to define the position of the sound in the stereo field. All busses allow an amplification of +12 dB. The level fader allows you to adjust the volume of the bus. You can put several channels into solo mode to hear all of them. Mutes all other busses and lets you hear the solo bus only. To collapse all mixer channels, click the Collapse All Mixer Channels button.Ĭollapsed mixer channels only show the most important controls, that is, level, pan, solo, mute, and a level meter. To expand all mixer channels, click the Expand All Mixer Channels button.Įxpanded mixer channels provide direct access to the insert/send effects. Collapse All Mixer Channels/Expand All Mixer Channels

To show the empty slot channels as well, activate the Show Empty Slots button. If the Show Slot Bus Channels button is activated, the Mixer only shows channels that are in use by programs loaded into the corresponding slots. To gain a better overview about which channels are used, activate the Hide Inactive Outputs button. If the Show Output Bus Channels button is activated, the Mixer shows all output busses. Shows all busses that are in use for the selected program or layer, including AUX busses. Shows all the busses that can be found inside the selected program or layer hierarchy. You can specify which type of bus you want to see at a given time by using the controls on the toolbar.
Out of the frying pan db solo plus#
The Mixer manages all busses that are available in a HALion instance, that is, the 32 stereo output busses plus one surround bus, the 64 slot busses, the 4 AUX busses, and a dynamic number of program and layer busses depending on the current program architecture.Įach bus can be controlled using a dedicated mixer channel, featuring functions like level, pan, mute, solo, and up to eight insert/send effects.
