In the US, if on stage, and you meet the 2 meters horizontal and 3 meters vertical beam placement rules,yes, you can mount on stage. 3 meters up from the highest audience accessable point. BTDTGtTS.
But they look at stabilty. And you need a signed waiver from everybody on stage stating they have been trained, and in some cases, dead man's switches, ie pressure sensitive floor mats for the performers to stand on. Its all about mechanical stability.
What we are cautioning you on is about position stability in a noisy, cluttered, vibration filled environment. Tripods often don't work there. Tripods with sandbags are often worse yet. Poles vibrate with huge amplitudes. You want scaffolds or half width scaffolds which is what Oz floyd uses.
Heck, I've done some stuff where half width scaffolding didn't work. If I can grab your mounting pole and shake it and move the beams around, you flunk. If the speakers shake your beams, even the dumbest promoter types will complain, as they want a crisp look.
Scaffolding that is tightly constructed and with locking wheels (better yet, NO wheels) is what you want for a first show. My projector has holes in the floor plate to lag screw it to the wood top on the scaffolding. Got a tee shirt for that one too. Assume you will be hit by 10,000 watts RMS of Bass. That is a typical rave.
steve
Last edited by mixedgas; 10-22-2009 at 10:46.
Qui habet Christos, habet Vitam!
I should have rented the space under my name for advertising.
When I still could have...