| light goes on when board turns off is being discussed in the ControlBooth Lighting and Electrics forum; Hi, I am currently using an ETC Express 24/48 with ETC L86 dimmer rack . When I turn off the ... |

Sounds like an errant data spike on the DMX line when you turn off the console. Try unplugging the DMX before you turn off the console and see if you have the same issue. If you are only using one universe of DMX you could try configuring the second output on the Express to be 1-512 and then plug your DMX line into the second port and see if you have the same issue as well.
Alex Weisman
Master Electrician - Pioneer Theatre Company
IceWolf Photography
Soup or art?
"...allow me to explain about the theatre business.
The natural condition is one of insurmountable obstacles on the road to imminent disaster!
...Strangely enough, it all turns out well."
Love CB? Upgrade to premium today!

Are you using a DMX to other protocol converter?
~Scott

Lighting Designer, Master Electrician, Pyrotechnician
Cool! (as far as problems go) This is a real mind tease. The slow fade indicates a series of new and descending DMX values are being written to the channel.
If the channel was programed to "hold last value" when DMX was lost, one could see a light coming on and staying on due to noise on the DMX line at shut down. This is not the case.
If the channel was programed to "go to black" when DMX was lost, then it may flicker on noise and immediately go to black. Not the case again!
This is reminiscent of the old analog days where the DC voltage would slowly fade as the caps drained, much like the LEDs on the board, but in this case, the signal is digital, and something is encoding the value as it drops.
Sounds like a board or encoder issue. Let us know!
John Dziel
DAE Concert Lighting
founded 1971
Intelligent Lighting Solutions
"Oh, that switch also fed the Hotel ?"

See this thread: Lights turn on at shutdown - Electronic Theatre Controls from the ETC forums. Also this post. BTW, I love the term "DMX death gasp", coined by Jason Badger, a top programmer.
Not necessarily. I think the dimmer fading at the same rate as the console LEDs is purely coincidental. The L86's "DMX Loss Behavior" is to fade all in 3 or 5 seconds, I think.
Last edited by derekleffew; April 7th, 2011 at 01:00 PM.
A programed fade from last valid value sure does explain it!
One would have to equate this to the turn-off thump in audio equipment.
This is mitigated in modern equipment by a circuit that clamps the output on loss of supply. You would think the same would be easy to incorporate into a DMX driver circuit. Instead, it sounds like the output of the driver is pulsing high on turn-off, and being interpreted as a string of 1's. This would hit whatever address was in the DMX string at the time, and be interpreted as values of 255.
The design rectification would be to clamp to the low, or 0 value at turn off. Unfortunately, easier said then done. To achieve a "0", the + data must be low, while the - data must be held high. This state must be held through several frames in order for the dimmers to acknowledge loss of DMX. (Less than one second.)
As DMX is a differential signal, simply bringing both outputs low would be read at random, the - line must be held high for a bit.
John Dziel
DAE Concert Lighting
founded 1971
Intelligent Lighting Solutions
"Oh, that switch also fed the Hotel ?"

Is the DMX line properly terminated?
Andre

I believe the DMX transceiver (transmitter?) IC used in the Express starts streaming from the instant it gets powered up until the instant it loses power. If so, it is very likely that stray noise can cause an inadvertent light or two to come on. We used to see this behaviour back in the old days before switching over to SACn to talk to our Sensor racks. There are likely a few threads here at CB on the topic.


Yes, Derek and JD are correct. This last gasp DMX blurb can be sent from most consoles on the market and any dimmer rack or pack with a Hold Last Look feature can capture it and display it as the OP has noted. JD is also right that stopping this from occurring in product design is very difficult.
What happens is that as the power supply in the console fades away after power shutoff, the DMX driver inadvertantly sends out some junk in the form of possibly recognizaable data right before turning itself off. The dimmer rack accepts that junk as valid data and then holds the level until the time it's suupposed to time out and fade out.
Every console does this differently and even two Express consoles might perform differently. We even had some people call us when they moved from Express to Ion that suddenly starting having this same issue when nothing else in the system changed.
We are coming out with a way to disable to chip and hopefully stop this kind of power down blip. The Ion series of consoles will benefit from this first. Keep an eye out for more info.
David
David North
ETC

Thanks for all the in-depth feedback!
Ah! A new product for DFD to market! A DMX "mute" box.
It could go inline and run off a wall-wart. Hit the switch and it just starts outputting all zeros! Would be a lot cheaper for most people than changing or upgrading the board. Or better yet, it could cue off a certain number on a certain address. Program that as the last scene before you power down. (reverse on power up.)
Wonder if his passive A/B switch would work?
http://www.dfd.com/sw.html
Last edited by JD; April 8th, 2011 at 02:55 PM. Reason: link
John Dziel
DAE Concert Lighting
founded 1971
Intelligent Lighting Solutions
"Oh, that switch also fed the Hotel ?"

Ah... Your over thinking it.. I think wiring a 3 pole switch with one pole having nothing connected for (off) and basically a pass through on the (on). I forsee it being a lock switch with it in a wall plate so it can also be used as a system lock out.

Y'all are all over thinking it what I always do is unplug the dmx cable before turning off the console. It's a real pain when you power down a moving light rig then part of the rig decides it's going to fire up when you turn off the console. I have seen this problem in the express and hog II consoles. This problem is going to start going away as eithernet starts to take over such as in a hog III where the console does not output any dmx.