Uhh... WOW! That's an amazing amount of
pyro!
@JD nailed it with his comment. Do it the right way with real professionals who know what they are doing and nobody gets hurt. Do it by yourself and on the cheap and you end up with a horrible tragedy.
We have gotten used to the idea that there is a product for every budget. In lighting and sound equipment there definitely is. Let's say there's a new Clay Packy
fixture that you want but can't afford. You can always
drop down a little in price, features, and quality to find a product you can afford. You may end up at the bottom buying random Chinese stuff on Ebay to get something in your budget. But there's always something that at least claims to do what you want in your price range. Some compromises are not that big of a deal, some are significant drops, but if you work your way down the long series of tiers from the very best to the barely functional you can eventually find a product that will do what you need in your price range (in some cases that's more "sort of do what you need").
When it comes to areas like
Pyro, Rigging, and Electrical
power. There's no gradual tier
system of quality and features. You either pay to do it right or you risk lives. I think this product for every budget way of thinking becomes a
trap that we fall into. It's too easy to think, "I can't afford to hire a professional but..." and from there it gets REALLY dangerous. As someone who teaches the next generation of technicians I emphasize over and over that there are some areas where compromise and creativity is fantastic and some areas where compromise and creativity is deadly. We have to learn the difference between the two and stand tall when your director/promoter/designer/
etc... tells you, "Hiring a professional isn't in the budget, we need you to figure out a way to ____ "