Map fixtures, modes, and spacing for outdoors quickly. See per-universe loads and overflow warnings instantly. Download address lists to wire and program confidently everywhere.
| Group | Qty | Channels | Common use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Path Lights | 12 | 3 | RGB landscape accents along walkways. |
| Spot Uplights | 8 | 5 | RGB plus dimmer for trees and walls. |
| Fountain RGB | 4 | 9 | Multi-parameter fixtures near water features. |
Use “Load example” to fill these values automatically.
Outdoor lighting layouts benefit from predictable addressing that installers can follow in the field. This calculator converts fixture counts and channel modes into a clear universe plan, starting from any universe and address you choose. For large properties, set a universe limit to match available outputs and detect over-allocation early. It also reports the exact end position, so you can confirm the controller patch matches the physical run.
Every fixture mode consumes a fixed number of channels, such as 3 for RGB or 5 for RGB plus dimmer. Total payload channels are the sum of (quantity × channels per fixture). When you mix modes across zones—paths, trees, water features—the schedule lists each fixture instance and its start and end address.
A standard universe carries 512 channels. If a fixture would overflow the remaining space, it may span universes. The “Avoid crossing” option pads the leftover channels and shifts the fixture to the next universe when possible, keeping device configuration simpler. Because garden cable runs are long, keeping fixtures within one universe reduces troubleshooting time and limits address mistakes. The table flags crossings so you can decide whether to re-balance groups.
Real projects evolve. Spare headroom increases the planned footprint by a percentage, helping you reserve capacity for future garden expansions or replacement fixtures. Optional gap channels can be added between fixtures to allow decoder offsets, testing space, or vendor-specific quirks. If you reserve 10% headroom, multiply used slots by 1.10 and round up safely. The summary separates payload, gaps, and padding for transparent budgeting.
CSV exports integrate with spreadsheets for procurement, labeling, and commissioning checklists. The PDF export provides a compact field pack: summary metrics plus the addressing list. Use the controller name to match drawings and cable tags, then validate the final patch in your lighting console or control software before night testing.
A DMX universe is a block of channels, typically 512, used to control lighting parameters. Each fixture consumes consecutive channels based on its mode, starting from its assigned address.
Use the fixture’s mode chart in its manual. Pick the mode you will actually run outdoors, then enter its channel count here so the address schedule matches patching and programming.
Enable it when you want each fixture to stay inside a single universe whenever possible. This reduces controller and decoder complexity and makes on-site troubleshooting faster.
Gap channels reserve space between fixtures for decoder offsets, test addresses, or vendor-specific requirements. They also make it easier to insert an extra fixture later without readdressing the whole line.
Headroom plans extra capacity for future garden upgrades, replacements, or additional zones. It expands the planned footprint without changing the immediate addressing list.
CSV is best for spreadsheets, labels, and commissioning checklists. PDF is a portable field sheet showing summary metrics and the addressing table for installers.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.