Martin Lightjockey Fixture Profiles Full
Since LightJockey is obsolete (last update ~2008), consider migrating to modern software that can import LightJockey shows or use a similar workflow:
If you must use LightJockey, consider running it on Windows XP or 7 (32-bit) as it may not work correctly on Windows 10/11. martin lightjockey fixture profiles full
LightJockey supports non-linear DMX curves for natural control: Since LightJockey is obsolete (last update ~2008), consider
Martin LightJockey, released in the late 1990s and widely used through the 2000s, was a revolutionary PC-based DMX-512 lighting control system. Unlike modern visual scripting environments, LightJockey relied fundamentally on Fixture Profiles—structured configuration files that translate the software’s internal control logic into manufacturer-specific DMX channel mappings. If you must use LightJockey, consider running it
A fixture profile in LightJockey is not merely a channel list; it is a behavioral definition. It dictates how the software’s faders, buttons, and effects engine interact with parameters like pan, tilt, color wheels, gobos, and shutter strobes. Without a correct profile, a fixture cannot be controlled intelligently; it degrades to raw DMX channel manipulation.
Rare but possible: linking two parameters so moving one moves the other (e.g., master dimmer controlling both dimmer and shutter). Implemented via the [LINK] section manually in .FML.