Ayrton Khamsin joins Wheel of Fortune
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“LEDs have finally caught up to where they’re able to replace a 1200W arc source,” says lighting director and programmer, William McLachlan. “I’ve used Ayrton fixtures on other shows; they’re building interesting lights that are becoming mainline workhorse fixtures.”
It was through McLachlan’s long-time relationship with ACT Lighting, the exclusive distributor of Ayrton fixtures in North America, that he learned about the new Khamsin fixtures. “We wanted to expand the show’s plot with moving key lights, and Khamsin had just come out. They had all the features, the output and the quality of light that we needed, so ACT lent us some Khamsins for a shoot-out, and we actually shot some shows with them.”
The Khamsin units “definitely stood out” he reports, so McLachlan recommended them to DP and lighting designer, Jeff Engel, and the Khamsins soon joined a group of 85 moving lights on the pipe grid over the 150 x 250-foot stage.
“That’s a big footprint to cover; we needed lights that would be usable from 90 feet away, and Khamsin’s output put them over the top,” says McLachlan. “They serve as moving key lights that save us lots of time as shots are set up, they fill the need for shutters that are required for a portion of the plot, and they paint the scenery with pattern, texture, softness, tone and colour.” The programme’s puzzle board and wheel remain the same show to show but the rest of the set changes to offer viewers an array of different looks.
McLachlan didn’t hesitate to recommend the new-to-market Khamsin fixtures due to his past history with ACT Lighting. “ACT choose to represent quality equipment and support it as if they were the manufacturer,” he says. “ACT is better than anybody in the business at treating and supporting equipment as if it were their own products.”
The Khamsin units went live with the new season of Wheel of Fortune that began shooting in July. “We’ve done our first two taping cycles, and the Khamsins are working great and looking fantastic,” McLachlan reports.
(Jim Evans)