Vicon Pulsar Reference Guide
About this guide
This guide contains the following information about Pulsars:
Pulsar status light
In addition to the infrared active marker LEDs that are visible in Vicon cameras, which are used for tracking, Vicon Pulsars have a status light, to enable you to recognize their current battery status and pairing/connection status. The status light comprises three visible LEDs (green, red, blue). The following table describes the LED states.
LED status | Description |
---|---|
Green on | Pulsar battery is charging* |
Green off (with USB charger connected) | Pulsar battery is fully charged |
Green off (with USB charger disconnected) | Pulsar battery has charge (>20%) |
Red on | Pulsar battery low (<=20%) |
Red off | Pulsar battery has charge (>20%) |
Blue off | Pulsar cannot configure the radio |
Blue on | Pulsar connected to Beacon |
Blue on-off (slow pulsing) | Pulsar paired to a Beacon but not connected |
Blue on-off (fast pulsing) | Pulsar not paired with a Beacon |
Red on-off → Blue on-off → Green on-off | Boot sequence |
All on-off (fast pulsing) | Pulsar selected in software |
All off | Pulsar powered down, or status lights disabled in software |
Red on-off (sequence repeating) | Invalid MAC address, pairing or connection critical failure |
* To ensure the charge indication light is visible, the cluster automatically switches on when plugged into the charger. This also disables power down via software, and the infrared marker LEDs are switched off.
Pulsar operation
You can use the power button on a Pulsar to perform the following functions.
To |
Do this |
---|---|
Turn on a Pulsar | On a Pulsar that is turned off, give the button a single short press. |
Select the Pulsar in Evoke | On a Pulsar that is connected, give the button a single short press. |
Turn off a Pulsar | On a Pulsar that is turned on, press the button for 2 seconds.* |
Reboot a Pulsar (retains settings) | On a Pulsar that is turned on, press the button for 10 seconds. |
Un-pair a Pulsar from Beacon | During the 10-second period after booting only, double-press the button.* |
* Can be disabled in software to prevent accidental use.
On the System tab, in the Clusters part of the System tree, Pulsars that are paired with a connected Beacon are displayed. Adjacent icons indicate the status of the Pulsars:
The following table describes each of the Pulsar status icons that are displayed on the System tab in Evoke.
Cyan Yellow Gray Green Red Yellow battery Red battery Lightning bolt Update Note that the overall system charge is determined by the device with the lowest charge (unless recharging – see the following note), which is shown at the top of the Clusters section on the System tab. The number of devices on charge is also displayed here.
In the following image, the yellow lightning icons to the right of the Pulsar names indicate that the batteries of the relevant Pulsars are charging (and the yellow battery icons indicate that the charge is still low). The Lowest Battery Charge indicator shows that the Pulsar with the lowest charge is now at 13%.
Pulsar status icons in Evoke
Icon Meaning Connected but not assigned a marker pattern Connected but disabled Automatically disabled as not linked to a Smart Object Enabled and assigned a valid marker pattern Disconnected Battery has low charge (less than 20%) Battery has very low charge (less than 10%) Plugged in for recharging Evoke has queued or sent new settings to the Pulsar but has not yet received a response No icon Loaded from a previous Evoke session but not yet connected to this instance of Evoke
The information displayed by the Lowest Battery Charge indicator depends on the number of devices that are currently charging:
In the following image, the red battery icons to the right of the Pulsar names indicate that the batteries of the relevant Pulsars are low. The Lowest Battery Charge indicator shows that the Pulsar with the lowest charge is almost at 0%, ie, almost fully discharged (a Pulsar whose battery is fully discharged can no longer communicate with Evoke and disconnects, and the Lowest Battery Charge indicator then displays the Pulsar with the next lowest battery).
Pulsar patterns
Under normal circumstances, the patterns for Pulsar active markers are automatically generated when you create Smart Objects and you don't need to change them. The following information is provided for troubleshooting purposes only.
When a Pulsar is first connected, it is displayed in Evoke with a default pattern of 0, which turns all active markers off. This prevents the Pulsar from interfering with the tracking of any paired Pulsars that already have patterns set.
If there are no Smart Objects, the Pulsar is Enabled and you can edit the Marker Pattern property. (The Marker Pattern property is an Advanced property as usually, patterns are automatically set when you create Smart Objects.) If any Smart Objects are present, the Marker Pattern property is read-only and controlled by the associated Smart Object. If Smart Objects are present, but a Pulsar has no associated Smart Object, you cannot change the pattern or Enabled property for the Pulsar.
The Smart Cluster Marker Pattern property represents the enabled active markers as a bit mask. The number value is converted to binary and a set bit represents an enabled active marker. For example, the value 255 is 1111 1111 in binary, so all eight markers would be enabled. The least significant bit (the one on the right) represents the 0 marker in the Pulsar LED circuit order, so the pattern value 64 (or 0100 0000 in binary) represents marker 6 and would result in the single marker below the status lights being enabled.
The following Pulsar LED circuit order diagram shows which LED corresponds to which bit position index.
To help generate patterns, you can use the Microsoft Windows 10 Calculator app in Programmer mode to convert from binary to decimal.