Well, we did water, so we thought we should add fire. Again, thanks to Michael Powers for allowing us to publish his Techie Corner articles. Welcome back to the Techie’s Corner. The last several columns have been about water, so now it’s time to talk about fire, hot burning fire. Leaping flames flashing and flickering or, in the case of many stage effects, a gimmick that can make an audience feel the warmth from a fire that couldn’t melt an ice cube.

There are probably a 1,000 ways to make fire on stage and only a few of them actually involve flame or combustion. However, long before we actually make the fire, we have to decide just what the fire is supposed to accomplish. Is it just eye candy for the set or is it establishing the mood of the moment.

What is the mood? Is the fire a warm flickering glow of romance or a feeble attempt to ward off the cold of a hovel a la “Boheme”? Maybe it is the warmth of friendship around a campfire or the despair of the homeless gathered around a fire in a trash can. nMaybe it is the evil, mysterious glow beneath the witch’s cauldron in Macbeth or the entire face of a building during the burning of Atlanta. Is the fire a friend that wards off the cold or an enemy that is trying to steal our home and threaten our safety?

How does the “mood” of the fire affect how we build/create it? First, do we need visible flames or just an indirect flickering glow. Is the color of the fire a warm glow or a cold heat? The more you use reds/orange, oranges and yellows in the flame the more it will seem hot, searing, arid. Colors in the amber, rose and burgundy range tend toward the “romantic”. Flames that are white hot, blue-white and blue tend to give the audience a feeling of unease, of very intense heat or strangely enough of a cold heat. Green flashes can give a softening effect to the red range and add an eerie unworldly effect when used as the main color or mixed with the white and blue-white flames.

For what it is worth, real flames tend to have some of all these colors in them, the balance depending on how much oxygen is present and the exact composition of the fuel. But we really don’t care what the actual chemical composition of the “fuel” would be. Verisimilitude here is secondary to creating the right mood.

Now that we have briefly discussed what fire should be or do, we will move into some basic methods of creating it. This month’s method will be a small battery operated fire unit that can be used in a trash can or behind or under logs to simulate a wood fire. In addition it can be used in conjunction with some of the methods I will touch on in the coming months.

The fire unit for this month consists of a few simple basic elements; several 12 volt lamps between 20 and 50 watts; a 12 volt battery, power supply or transformer; wire; terminal strips or buss bars; sockets; automobile turn signal flashers and one 20 amp toggle switch.

Lamps can be any 12 volt lamps you can locate. Light bulbs from motor homes, campers and other RV’s that look like a normal, house hold light bulb, medium screw base “A” lamps, but designed to operate on 12 volts DC are one type. These can be purchased at Wall-mart, Motor Home/RV dealers, most KOA campgrounds and other placers that cater to the RV camper trade. Automobile tail light lamps or halogen head light lamps are anther very good type of lamp to use. Headlight lamps are brighter than tail light lamps. These can be purchased at any auto supply store, K-mart super stores, Wal-mart etc. Twelve volt MR-16’s can also be used.

The MR-16 looks like a small reflector lamp about 2” across the face and come in many types from 6 volts to 12, 24, 82, 120, 220 and other various voltage designs, which means you have to double check the voltage before you buy them.MR-16 lamps can be purchased through Grainger, McMaster Carr, Newark Electronics, Allied Electronics and most electrical supply stores and lighting stores. Which type of lamp to use depends on availability in your area, cost, and physically how large you need your completed unit to be. In general the RV lamp creates the largest fire unit and auto lamp units the smallest.

Sockets: sockets can be any kind that fit the lamps you intend to use, or one can solder leads directly to the lamp contacts or base. If sockets are available, I strongly advise that you use them as this makes replacing a lamp much easier and the socket can be firmly attached to whatever you use as a base for the fire unit. 

Wire should be at least 16ga stranded from the lamps to the flashers and from the flashers to a common buss bar or terminal strip. The single wire from the terminal strips to the switch and from the switch to the battery must be 12ga minimum.

The reason the switch must be rated at 20 amps and the power leads to and from the battery must be at least 12 ga. is that the amperage in the system is a lot more than you may think if you are not familiar with low voltage circuits. Usually the best lamps for this effect are about 50 watts. Using ohms law, Watts equal the Voltage times the amperage (W=VA) we find that a single 50 watt lamp at 12 volts equals 4.16 amps ( 50 = 12xA; 50/12 = A; 4.166=A).

A 25 watt lamp would pull 2.08 amps. I suggest using six to nine lamps for this effect. Lets figure the amperage if all nine lamps happen to be on at the same time. We can multiply 4.16 times nine to get 37.44 amps or we can use the formula W=VA to find that450 watts divided by 12 volts equals 37.5 amps. Either way we are exceeding the capacity of both the switch and the wire. However we can do what electric companies call de-rating. As the flashers are not a precision device, the lamps are going to flash randomly and the probability is that even if all 9 lamps should be on at the same time (very unlikely) that the time duration will be very short. In fact each lamp is only on for about half the time so by averaging that means that the current will actually be about 18 amps at the worst.

If you are using lower wattage lamps then you can figure the amperage for your self if you want or you can simply stick with the wire for the 50 watt situation and know that you are O.K. am not sure if standard auto flashers will handle 100 watt lamps as I have never tried it. I feel that this would probably be too bright for most situations. However if you need a very bright effect try 100 watt lamps and perhaps a flasher for a tractor trailer rig. If any readers try this please give me an e-mail and let me know how it works or not.

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Now it is time to actually build our effect.

First we have to determine just how the effect is to be used. One problem with the flashers is that they make an audible click as they cycle on and off. Whether or not this sound is objectionable depends on the size of the stage, the type of show (loud musical, quiet drama) and just where on the set the effect is located. When possible it is usually better to build a separate container for the flasher units, sound insulate it and locate it as far away as practical. For an example, see illustration # 1. An example of a sound isolated box is seen in Illustration #2.Note that the flashers need no air space for operation or cooling so they can be mounted so that they are actually touching or very close.

After choosing the lamps and sockets the first step is to lay out a full size circuit pattern on Kraft paper, drafting paper, card board or something similar. If you need to make separate boxes, containers or mounting boards for the lamps and or flasher sections, make your drawing accordingly. As you make this lay out drawing, pay attention to where the contacts are on the various elements so that you don’t make the wiring harder than it should be. You will need a separate flasher for each lamp. This is so that each lamp will flash independently of all the others.

Each lamp must be wired in series with it’s flasher, then all the flashers need to be wired in parallel to the switch and power, see illustration # 3.

Note that this illustration is not to scale and indicates the wiring connections only, not necessarily the physical location of any item in the actual construction of the effect. You can also use wire nuts to replace the terminal strips but the number of wires quickly makes this awkward and unwieldy.

The flashers can be attached to the plywood by hot glue, epoxy or construction adhesive like liquid nails. When buying the flashers you will notice that some have two contacts and some have three. Both can be used you just have to connect a lamp across any two of the three contacts and move the wires from one contact to another until it works. The third contact is then simply ignored.

Finally for the fire unit itself, attach the sockets to a piece of plywood, 1/2” or 3/4”.You can space the sockets as close as the lamps and wiring convenience will allow. The plywood base should be 2” or 3” larger than your socket layout to allow ample room to attach color media.T he easiest way to do the color media is to start with a sheet of clear. Next cut small, odd shaped pieces of scrap gel (leftovers from cutting gel for lighting instruments) and scotch tape them to the clear sheet. Any thing from 2” to 6” across is fine and the more irregular in shape and size, the better. Next, wad the sheet up into a tight little ball, then lay it out flat again. At this point you might have to repair your tape job in a few places. In this crumpled state the gel sheet can be shaped into a self supporting “dome” that can then be stapled or taped to the plywood base over the lamps. It is best if there is at least an inch or two between the lamps and the gel. There is no fire danger if the gel touches a lamp, but the effect looks better if each lamp lights up several gel pieces as it flashes. If the gel “dome” will be visible to the audience, a bit of artistic dusting, mostly around the bottom, with flat black spray paint will help to make it look like coals or embers. If the effect is to be in a trash can or other “out-of-sight” location, the crumple and spray can be eliminated. Just place a piece of screen wire or chicken wire over the lamps and lay the gel pieces on top. You still need to tape them together though so that air currents won’t shift the gel away.

When doing the wiring, lay it out in as neat and orderly a manner as possible. Group the wires together and fasten firmly to the base where the bundle of wires goes to the flasher box. If you use nine lamps that means you will have 10 wires going from the lamp unit to the flasher box, nine to the individual flashers and one from the terminal strip to the battery. Use tie wraps, tape or something to create a neat bundle.

In the next few months, I will touch on other methods of creating fire. As always, if you have any questions, feel free to e-mail me and ask. Till next month…… Don’t sweat the small stuff and remember………. its all small stuff

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