T
Terry Parker
Guest
Last year I purchased four sets of those christmas lights that use a
little controller to cycle between various patterns (all on, fade
on/off, alternate flash, chase, etc.). Using a little button on the
controller you can select one of the modes, or a mode to cycle between
all of them.
Only way to synch them all up is to get them all set to "all on" mode,
then, as quickly as possible, hit all their switches at the same time
to switch to "cycle through all displays" mode. This works fine
(albeit a pain) until you cut power and turn it back on. They start
back up totally unsynch'd (and apparently random, which really baffles
me). Even if you plug them all into one cord run off a single A/C
timer.
Anyone got any clever way to keep these things synch'd up? I've been
toying with trying to keep power to the controller while cutting it to
the lights, but this is a pain as there are multiple strands and 4
light sets. I have a VERY basic understanding of solid state
electronics, but after searching through this group and reading some
related posts I expect to find a lot of cryptically (if at all)
labeled parts and not much to go on. Anyone got a clever idea I've
missed here?
Terry Parker
terry parker at myself dot com (remove spaces and convert "at")
little controller to cycle between various patterns (all on, fade
on/off, alternate flash, chase, etc.). Using a little button on the
controller you can select one of the modes, or a mode to cycle between
all of them.
Only way to synch them all up is to get them all set to "all on" mode,
then, as quickly as possible, hit all their switches at the same time
to switch to "cycle through all displays" mode. This works fine
(albeit a pain) until you cut power and turn it back on. They start
back up totally unsynch'd (and apparently random, which really baffles
me). Even if you plug them all into one cord run off a single A/C
timer.
Anyone got any clever way to keep these things synch'd up? I've been
toying with trying to keep power to the controller while cutting it to
the lights, but this is a pain as there are multiple strands and 4
light sets. I have a VERY basic understanding of solid state
electronics, but after searching through this group and reading some
related posts I expect to find a lot of cryptically (if at all)
labeled parts and not much to go on. Anyone got a clever idea I've
missed here?
Terry Parker
terry parker at myself dot com (remove spaces and convert "at")