Dimmer Curves
Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs) are inherently current driven, rather than voltage driven. A side effect of this difference is that linear light dimming requires square-law input current. All good LED dimmers use ISL (“I” means inverse, starting to rise slowly, getting faster as it progresses).
Almost all LED dimmers, including RC4, are “constant voltage” dimmers. This means that a conversion from voltage to current must happen in the LED device you are connecting to. LED tape and most products that use many discrete LEDs on a panel use small current limiting resistors for each individual LED color. This creates the best looking dimmer output, but it is not the most efficient — it works perfectly all the way down to zero. The downside is that resistors generate heat, which is wasted energy.
Larger sized LED fixtures, especially ones designed for maximum efficiency, use sophisticated active electronics built into the panel for current limiting. Those devices require a minimum amount of power for the electronics to turn on, so they have a drop-out margin at the bottom end. If your LED panel doesn’t come on until dimming hits 10%, or 30%, or some other minimum level, you are dealing with active electronics in the panel. In many cases, these devices respond better to a Linear control curve. The electronics in the panel are doing the actual dimming, and they are sometimes a little steppier than a resistor-limited “direct drive” panel. That steppiness is not caused by the RC4 dimmer, it’s the driver electronics in the panel itself.
In Short: if there is no active electronics in the LED fixture, you should use the ISL curve. ISL is the RC4 LumenDim default curve. This usually produces the smoothest dimming results, with a linear relationship between the DMX control level and the light output (50% DMX level = approx. 50% of maximum light output). But if the panel has active electronics in it, try the Linear curve. The dimming quality is determined by the fixture, the RC4 device just tells it what light level is wanted.
Modulation Frequencies
that, only 8000 steps.
There is one more trade-off to consider: When there are more steps per second, the dimmer is do a lot more switching on and off to make the pulses. Each switching action reduces efficiency, which reduces overall power handling and increases heating in the dimmer electronics. This is another reason to use the lowest possible frequency. It’s also important to know that that maximum load you can connect to a dimmer is less when running higher PWM frequencies.
Use the lowest frequency that does not result in visible artifacts on camera. The only way to get this right is through trial-and-error. For normal frame rates in typical production lighting, a 5kHz PWM frequency is the usual selection, and that’s the RC4 LumenDim default.
Smoothing (RC4 Digital Persistence)
A single channel of DMX control is 8-bit, which is only 256 steps of dimming. To make use of all the additional resolution in an RC4 dimmer, smoothing is used. This is not just an RC4 thing, pretty much every good dimmer does something of this nature. However, we’ve put a lot of extra effort into emulating what an incandescent lamp filament does — the thermal rise and fall, emulating what happens when the little filament wire starts cold, warms up to glow, ever brighter, until it’s bright white. All of that happens over time, and it’s not a strictly linear progression. The larger the filament (for higher wattage incandescent lamps), the slower the rise and fall becomes. We call this RC4 Digital Persistence.
When RC4 Digital Persistence (smoothing) is off, there is no bit-rate conversion happening, so you only get 256 steps when controlling from a single DMX channel. It’s very visibly steppy, because that’s what the console signal is, with nothing in between — no smoothing.
At Medium Digital Persistence, the timing is very similar to a 50W MR16 Halogen lamp. That’s generally considered a good look, and it’s the RC4 LumenDim default. At Very Slow Digital Persistence, it’s the appearance of a very very large filament lamp.
Again, experimentation is the only way to find the right setting for your application.
When using an LED fixture that uses internal electronics, it handles the dimming. The maximum resolution is determined by it, not the RC4 settings. Sending RC4 super high-res PWM to a device like that will not improve the appearance, because it can only do whatever it is designed internally to do.
TLDR…
Recommended defaults for LED control to get started are:
ISL curve
5kHz PWM
Medium Smoothing
For an LED fixture with built-in electronics, you might want to start with:
Linear curve
77Hz PWM
Smoothing OFF or Medium
There are no perfect or ideal settings, every fixture and application is different. Experiment and fine-tune for the best result. Don’t just use your eyes, do test shots on camera to determine the thresholds for visible artifacts like banding and flickering, increasing the PWM frequency to find the lowest freq where there are no artifacts. That is the sweet spot that gives you the smoothing dimming with the highest power handling.