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"For a six hour show, it's pulling only five and a half amps on a 15 amp breaker. So I tested this a while ago to see how much it was pulling," he said. The reason is that he runs all of his lights at anywhere between 10-25% intensity and converts his currents to 12 volt DC voltage. Small said that surprisingly, the lights don't run up his electricity bill significantly. This year's setup took 2 weeks to finish. In preparation of this show, Small added several thousand new lights to the front of his house, each connected to panels he made by hand. From there, he can change the color of each light individually, or sync them to a pattern.
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Each light is programmed in a program that Small called a "mix between Excel and Paint." The program loads a massive spreadsheet, where the x-axis tells time increments and each box on the y-axis represents an individual light. Small walked through how exactly he designed the show: the entire yard runs off of a single laptop. This year, the show is 45 minutes long from start to finish, with 4 new songs added bringing the total up to 15 with over 20,000 total lights. Now that he's moved, he promises that his show hasn't gone away, and has only gotten bigger. Two years ago, Small lived off of Red Top Avenue in Cottondale, where some nights he would see over 100 cars a night. Family caused him to move back to the Tuscaloosa area, and he's continued the annual light show tradition, continuing to add on to the show's length and adding more lights.