tysonhphoto Posted November 6, 2009 Share Posted November 6, 2009 Robert, You are awesome! Thank you very much! One funny thing that happened was my first CCR, on that first leap, the entire ribbon was on for that sequence. I tried changing the ID, timing, color, etc. It wasn't until I added some blank time before that first set of instructions that it started working properly. Not sure what's up with that, but no biggie! I'm understanding these much better now. And the shorter the time, the faster the leap. Very cool, thank you so so much for doing this so fast for me!Hmm...I wonder how to make the white more warm (less blue) I may mess with that if I have time.Cheers! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Darryl Lambert Posted November 6, 2009 Share Posted November 6, 2009 This is taken from page 12 in the manual.[align=left]Caveats[/align][align=left]Remember that the order in which the software[/align][align=left]sends LOR commands to controllers in a[/align][align=left]centisecond is not predictable. This means that you[/align][align=left]should NOT set any upper channel commands[/align][align=left](channels 151-157) in the same centisecond as you[/align][align=left]are changing the RGB channels. This can cause[/align][align=left]confusing results.[/align][align=left]Likewise it is always better to configure a Macro[/align][align=left]Effect at least one centisecond (1/100 sec) before[/align][align=left]activating any underlying RGB or Color Effect. This[/align][align=left]guarantees no flash of the LEDs that might occur[/align][align=left]because the macro effect command has not yet[/align]been received but the RGB/Color effect has. Darryl Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JeffBlan Posted November 7, 2009 Share Posted November 7, 2009 TysonH wrote: Hmm...I wonder how to make the white more warm (less blue) I may mess with that if I have time.I've been trying to do this myself but I haven't come up with anything that I REALLY like. The best I found so far is 100% Red, 42% Green and 4% Blue. With those settings, I get it to match my other Warm White LED's but some of the lights have a light green tint to them so I'm not really satisfied with the overall result but it is better then having all channels at 100% since that white is VERY different from all my other warm white LED's.FYI, I'm using 100% Red and 10% Green to get my Orange color and 100% Red and 45% Green to get the Yellow/Gold color.I wish there was an easy way to get the color mappings from an RGB color you see on a computer screen. In my testing, you can't relate them to each other as you get a different color.Let me know what you come up with for the Warm White.Jeff Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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