VL3515 Spot
The VARI-LITE VL3515 Spot Luminaire provides the increased output of a 1500W lamp in a luminaire that offers the same famous features as the 1200W VL3500 Spot. Standard dual reflectors allow users to choose either a peaked or flat field beam.
The VARI-LITE VL3515 Spot luminaire maintains the same high standards for imagery, beam control, color and brightness set by the original VARI-LITE Series 3000 Spot luminaires, but with the added feature of a four-blade shutter mechanism that allows the blades to be operated independently or in unison on two planes for a clear and crisp image.
The VARI-LITE VL3515 Spot luminaire features 6:1 zoom optics, CYM color mixing, variable CTO color temperature correction, a six-position color wheel, two gobo/effects wheels, a shutter and separate dimmer and ultra-fast strobe mechanisms. A standard palette of gobos, effects and colors is provided with the unit. Custom gobos, effects and colors are available.
The VL3515 allows users to operate its single lamp at three different wattages via either a control channel setting or a lamp menu option. With only a setting adjustment, the fixture will run its short arc lamp at 900W, 1200W or 1650W without any detrimental effects on the lamp.
An upper enclosure houses the control electronics as well as the arc power supply for the 1500 watt short arc lamp. The arc power supply is power factor corrected for efficient power distribution. New, oversized upper-enclosure handles allow for easier hanging and loading.
The VL3515 Spot luminaire can be controlled from a wide variety of DMX512 consoles.
The luminaire is similarly sized in comparison to all other VARI?LITE Series 3000 luminaires, providing a consistent hang configuration and appearance no matter which luminaire type is required.
Specifications
The unit is an integrally designed, remote-controlled, motorized spot luminaire. The head, yoke and enclosure housings are constructed of aluminum alloy for light weight, strength and durability. Low-noise fans provide forced-air cooling for internal components. The rear cap is hinged, providing easy access to the lamp for replacement. Oversized upper-enclosure handles allow for easier hanging and loading.
A single PowerCon input connector along with two, five-pin DMX512 compatible connectors (in and through) are provided. The unit can be controlled from a wide variety of DMX512 consoles.
Each unit is equipped with an on-board processor providing diagnostic and self-calibration functions as well as internal test routines and software update capabilities.
The unit contains two independent three-phase stepper motors to provide movement of the head through 540° in the horizontal plane (pan) and 270° in the vertical plane (tilt). The pan and tilt mechanisms are belt-driven, providing positional resolution and repeatability of 0.3° on either axis.
A 6:1 zoom optics system adjusts the projected field angle over a range of 10° to 60°. Variable beam focus is provided to soften the edges of gobos or spots and to provide gobo morphing. The projected image remains in focus throughout the entire zoom range.
Standard dual reflectors shall allow users to achieve either a peaked or flat field beam.
The unit contains a CYM color mixing system, as well as variable CTO color temperature correction.
One fixed color filter wheel is included. The color wheel holds six interchangeable dichroic colors to allow for custom configurations. The unit comes equipped with a standard palette of dichroic color filters.
The fixture?s shutter mechanism is comprised of four frame blades that move independently or in unison on two planes for a crisp, sharp image. The entire assembly operates in a smooth, time-continuous motion using stepper motors (two per frame blade and one for the entire mechanism). The shutter mechanism can rotate 50° in either direction and the frame blades can tilt +/- 30°.
Each luminaire has two gobo/effects wheels. One is a six-position rotating gobo wheel containing individually rotating, indexable gobos and patterned glass effects. One position on this wheel is open. A second gobo effects wheel is a seven position, fixed wheel and accepts six gobos with one position open. Each gobo/effects wheel is such that allows customization of the unit. The unit comes equipped with a standard set of gobos and effects. (A wide selection of colored and patterned gobos and effects is available from Vari-Lite.)
The unit contains a patterned glass dimmer wheel that provides full field dimming and allows for smooth timed fades and fast blackouts.
A dual blade strobe and dousing system provides variable strobe effects capable of rapid operation.
The unit shall be ETL and ETLc certified and CE-marked. Exterior finish is black.
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Used Vari-Lite
VARI*LITE is the brand name of one of the first automated, variable-colour stage lighting systems to be created. Their intelligent lighting fixtures are commonly used in theatre, concerts, television, film and corporate events.The company has won three Primetime Emmy Awards for technical achievement: in 1991, for Outstanding Achievement in Engineering, in the development of the Series 200 system; in 1994, for the development of the VL5 and in 2001 for Outstanding Achievement in Engineering for the Virtuoso console.
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Ears: The three individual slots that function as the color frame holder found on the front of some light sources. They are often used to retain other items, such as color wheels, barn doors, etc.
Edison Connector: The standard household male, parallel-blade plug that may or may not have a ground pin.
Edison Lamp Holder: The standard household screw-in lamp socket that accepts medium screw type lamp bases.
Egg Crate: A square or rectangular grid that, when installed on large open face light sources, alters the shape and intensity of the light and reduces glare.
Electrical Current: The flow of electrons from one point to another, measured in Amperes.
Electrical Frequency: The cycles per second of alternating current, measured in Hertz. In North America, and parts of South America and Southeast Asia, the frequency is 60Hz. The rest of the world operates on a frequency of 50Hz.
Electrical Noise: A general term for an unwanted electronic disturbance in conductors or electrical or electronic equipment. This equipment can also be the cause of electrical noise.
Electrical Power: The rate at which electricity is delivered to a circuit, in watts, or in reference to magnetic transformers, in Volt-Amperes.
Electronic Ballast: A ballast uses electronic components to limit electrical current. This type of ballast is often referred to as a flicker-free ballast.
Ellipsoidal: Short for Ellipsoidal Spotlight.
Ellipsoidal Spotlight: A spotlight that is encased in an ellipse-shaped reflector and framing shutters, and sometimes an iris and pattern slot.
Eye Light: A small, intense light source used to front light a subject, usually a person`s face, with hard light.
Fahrenheit: A graduated scale used to measure temperature. In the Fahrenheit scale, the freezing point is 32°F and the boiling point is 212°F.
Falloff: A term used to describe the illuminated area just outside of the field. (This term may also refer to the illumination in this area.) Light from a point source falls off inversely to the square of the distance. Move the light from 10` away to 20` away, and you have 1/4 of the intensity 40`, 1/16th.
Diffused lights fall off even faster than point sources. See Inverse Square Law.
fc: Abbreviation for foot-candle.
Feed Through: A wiring system employed in some electrical equipment and light sources in which the line-side leads or flush-mount connector(s) for a first item branch into two circuits internally. One circuit provides the electrical supply to the item itself, and the second circuit exits the unit by means of a set of load-side leads or another flush-mount connector(s). This allows for a second item to be electrically connected to the first. A plurality of items may be connected in this way, usually light sources such as strip lights. See Daisy Chain.
Female: A term applied to a connector that contains the holes or slots for receiving the pins, prongs, blades or tabs of a male connector. The female connector should always be attached to the line side of a circuit.
Field Angle: The angle of the vertex of a cone-shaped beam where the perimeter of the base is defined by where the intensity is 10% of the maximum intensity.
Field Diameter: The diameter of the base of a cone-shaped beam where the perimeter of the base is defined by where the intensity is 10% of the maximum intensity.
Filament: The wire inside an incandescent lamp envelope that glows and emits light when heated, i.e., when electricity passes through it.
Fill: To create the illumination needed to reduce shadows in an area or on a subject.
Fill Light: Angled from the side opposite the key light, this light softens the shadows created by the key and evens out the lighting ratio.
Filter: A term that refers to color media, diffusion material, light blocking or neutral density.
Filter Frame: See Color Frame.
Finger: A small, narrow, rectangular scrim, diffuser, reflector, or gobo, placed close to a light source, used for dimming, softening, bounce lighting, and casting shadows, respectively. Fingers are usually 2" to 6" in length, and 12" to 14" in width.
FL: A lamp designation that means flood.
Flag: (Filter, Gobo) An opaque panel, usually made of fabric, placed in the beam of a light source to block a portion of the beam or the whole beam. It can also hide lights in the dark recesses of a scene. They are usually square or slightly rectangular in shape, ranging from 10" to 48" in length, and 12" to 48" in width. Which term you use depends upon the device`s size and what part of the country you are in.
Flash: A tube filled with xenon gas through which an electrical charge of high voltage is passed to create an electrical arc that emits a short, bright flash of light. Flash light is daylight balanced, usually measuring 5500° Kelvin. See Strobe.
Flat Light: See Diffuse Light. All light is characterless, texture less and shallow shadowed when the source is close to the camera. Soft light is, by its nature, flatter than hard light, but even a soft source, above or to the subject`s side, is not flat.
Flicker: The flashing of some light sources that cannot be visually detected because of the frequency of its output voltage, but can adversely affect the way motion picture film records light.
Flicker-Free: A term used to describe electronic ballasts that electronically alter the electrical frequency that causes flicker.
Flood: The position of a moveable lamp, lens or pair of lenses on a spotlight that produces the widest field angle. To direct a large amount of light on a relatively large area.
Flood Light:A light source consisting of a rectangular lamp and sometimes a single lens, used to direct a large amount of light on a relatively large area.
Floppy Flag: A large flag that is designed to fold in half and function as a cutter or smaller flag.
Fluorescence: The property of certain materials to absorb radiation of certain wavelengths, usually ultraviolet, and re-emit the radiation as light.
Fluorescent Lights: Cool and daylight balanced, fluorescent lights have become very popular for photographic and video capture. Fluorescent lighting can be used in the form of screw-in bulbs and reflectors, or rectangular banks of lights.
Foamcore: A polystyrene, Styrofoam material used as a substrate for some reflector boards, effective because of its light weight and ease of mounting via reflector forks.
Focus: To aim and adjust a light source to give the beam its desired size (spot or flood), edge (soft or hard), field (even or peak) and shape (round, patterned or cut).
Focus Lens: A movable lens in a multi-lens optical system that adjusts the focus of a light source.
Follow Spot: A narrow-beam focusing instrument that is manually operated and is usually composed of a powerful light source, an iris, shutters, a color changer and other features. It is usually operated from an adjustable stand and is used to follow performer(s) on a stage with its beam, surrounding the performer(s) in a large pool of light.
Foot-candle (fc): A non-metric unit of measurement for Illumination, i.e., 1 lumen per square foot.
Framing Projector: A spotlight that has framing shutters or barn doors.
Framing Shutters: Thin, movable, heat-resistant metal plates that are introduced into a beam such that a portion(s) of the beam is blocked off,i.e., framed affecting the beam pattern, usually forming a sharp edge in the beam. They are used in various types of light sources, but extensively in ellipsoidal spotlights, usually four (top, bottom, right and left) follow spots, usually two (top and bottom), always situated internally, and usually at the aperture. Framing shutters generally can be independently adjusted, but those used in follow spots usually move simultaneously with a single control mechanism.
French Flag: A small metal flag, usually used for shading.
Fresnel: Short for Fresnel Spotlight.
Fresnel Lens: Named for its inventor, French physicist Augustin J. Fresnel, and developed around 1800 for lighthouses, this is a flat lens consisting of concentric rings on one side that are segments of the spherical portion of a Plano-convex lens. The other side is flat, i.e., Plano. It controls light in the same manner as a Plano-convex lens, which converges light into a beam.Many light sources employing this type of lens have a stippled pattern on the flat side of the lens to diffuse to smooth out the beam.
Fresnel Spotlight: A spotlight employing a single Fresnel lens that produces a soft-edged beam, usually provided with a spherical reflector and a means to adjust the focus from spot to flood.
F/Stop: A rating often applied to scrims used in the film and video industries on their ability to dim light. This rating is directly related to a camera`s ability to allow for the admittance of light.
Full Scrim: A metal scrim whose screen occupies the complete frame.
Fuse: An electrical device designed to stop the flow of electricity automatically when a predetermined over current tries to pass through it. This is meant to prevent further damage or fire from overheating.
Fused Quartz: A relatively pure, high-temperature glass used to manufacture lamp envelopes. It has a melting point of approximately 1650° C.
Gaffer: The lighting technician who is in charge of the electrical aspects of a set or production.
Gaffer Grip: A large, spring-loaded clamp with serrated or rubbercushioned jaws. It usually has a stud or studs for the attachment of luminaries and grip equipment.
Gaffer`s Pole: See Operating Pole.
Gag: An apparatus composed of two grip heads attached to each other via a common bolt.
Gel (Gelatin, Media): As used with photographic lights, a strong, flexible, fade-resistant material, used to change the color, amount or quality of light. A colored filter placed in front of a lighting fixture. Color is an important element in adult learning.
Gobo: A logo or image etched out of metal that allows it to be projected onto a screen, wall, banner or other solid surface. Often used for brand reinforcement during events. Video mapping can be used to produce a similar by higher-end effect.
Guide Number: Guide numbers are used as a rating system to gauge the power or range of flash. The guide number equals the distance x f/stop. For example, say your flash has a guide number of 80. At ISO 100, to determine the proper exposure for a subject 20 feet away, multiply 20 by X number (in this case 4) to get 80 (the guide number). Setting the aperture to f/4 (80 = 20 x 4) will render a proper exposure (at ISO 100).
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