Hi,
from my understanding Audiostrobe has two control signals at 19200 Hz, one on each side.
I can totally understand how these could control the brightness of a led per eye but how is encoded what color of led to activate?
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Hi,
from my understanding Audiostrobe has two control signals at 19200 Hz, one on each side.
I can totally understand how these could control the brightness of a led per eye but how is encoded what color of led to activate?
In the older devices, like the Proteus or Sirius, they only had 2 light channels. Either the same color, where the 2 channels were left and right, or 2 colors where the 2 channels were 2 different colors.
On the newer devices like the Limina or Kasina, those 2 channels can be "mapped" to whatever colors you would like. These mappings are called "ColorSets".
Here is some information on them, but they are all listed in the Kasina Manual.
thanks for your answer
I am asking as I am diying a strobe lamp for myself. It is going pretty well I am just wondering how some programs have alternating triggering of different leds on one side.
ah ok i see so the leds can be mapped to different colours but then there is the same on both eyes, right?
More clearly, the LED control signals (Left or Right) within the AudioStrobe session are mapped to the colors on the Ganzframes. If you're using a Kasina or Limina, that equates to many possible combinations out of 6 possible Ganzframes "channels" (Left Red, Green, Blue and Right Red, Green, Blue).
What device are you using to drive your DIY strobe?
thanks a lot. I have a kasina here but right now i am having a adc a mcu a dac and some led's in front of me. I am analyzing the audio inside the mcu and wonder about nice ways to map the data to colours