UHF Wi-fi XLR Transmitter and Receiver with 48V Energy Provide,Rechargeable Mic Adapter 16 Channels 196ft Vary for Dynamic/Condenser Mics,Audio Mixer,Electrical Guitar Bass,PA Device
Original price was: $ 59.89.$ 48.99Current price is: $ 48.99.
Product Dimensions | 5.7 x 5.5 x 2.6 inches |
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Merchandise Weight | 12.3 oz. |
ASIN | B0DBL4LJ4B |
Merchandise style quantity | WMN001 |
Batteries | 2 Lithium Polymer batteries required. (integrated) |
Buyer Evaluations |
4.2 out of five stars |
Perfect Dealers Rank | #5,614 in Musical Tools (See Best 100 in Musical Tools) #52 in Wi-fi Microphone Transmitters & Receivers #666 in Microphone Equipment |
Date First To be had | July 30, 2024 |
Producer | Yunmi |
Nation of Starting place | China |
Guaranty & Reinforce
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Product Description
【REDEFINE WIRELESS XLR TRANSMITTER AND RECEIVER】 Evolved through W IN-Combine senior engineers, This light-weight wi-fi XLR transmitter and receiver is a brand spanking new product from 2024. Inbuilt 0V/5V/48V/LINE mode, It isn’t most effective appropriate for XLR microphones,but in addition best for guitar/device audio reception
【UHF WIRELESS AUDIO TRANSMITTER AND RECEIVER】In comparison with 2.4GHz and 5.8GHz frequency, the UHF band has the extra tough skill to attenuate the interference from electronics merchandise like telephones,TV and routers, WIFI apparatus.UHF Band has 16 channels, no want to fear about surrounding interference even stacking with a couple of programs
【ULTRA LONG WORKING DISTANCE AND SUFFICIENT WORKING HOURS】As much as 196ft operating vary and no cable mess,you’ll unfastened to transport and immerse yourselves at the level. Eliminating demanding cable and brief wi-fi vary ceaselessly. Transmitters and receiver integrated rechargeable lithium battery. It might enhance one transmitter operating 5-8 hours which guarantees nice efficiency for each and every use
【VERSATILITY AND HUMANIZED PRODUCT DESIGN】 The lock design of the XLR plug protects the transmitter from by chance falling after it is hooked up to the microphone. The indications come with energy, 48V phantom energy, low voltage and charging indicator, so that you could know the operating standing of the transmitter and receiver
【WHAT YOU GET】Packing record:receiver x 1,transmitter x 1,xlr to six.35pug x 1,xlr to six.35plus x 1,charging cable x 1,consumer handbook,package deal x 1. When you have any high quality proceedings or different questions, the logo after-sales staff might be at your carrier at any time
isma864 –
excellent results
As a mobile DJ, I used this to shoot audio from my system to an external speaker into another room. Worked like a charm. Also since its UHF and not on the 2.4 band, there’s no interference from other equipment, routers, Cell phones, etc.Used it for 6 hours and still had battery power left over. These actually worked better than the $300 Sennheisers I had used before
Joewires –
Good replacement for wiring if the battery lasts
Iâm still a little afraid the battery will drop out in the middle of a gig but so far this is pretty good
Keith Glenn –
Great units up to 100 feet
Hello, I have used these several times now and up to 100′ and lines of site are fine but once you lose line of site it’s dead out of the water. Not just these units but others as well. If I’m doing separate rooms I will send a signal to a speaker close to the other room and shoot the signal across the way to the next room. That’s the only way. So I have 2 sets of these because if this and I may even get a 3rd. They sound amazing and very easy to set up. Battery life is great too!
Sofia –
The device makes noice when using phantom power
I bought it just because it provides the phantom power. But device makes a noice
Amazon Customer –
Best bang for buck!
I was able to go about 100 feet through walls with no issues and easily 150 feet no walls no problem. The sound is very solid! I haven’t tested the full battery life yet but I will update if it seems off from what is advertised. I am going to scoop 1 of the 5g models to cross compare but for my money this was a good deal. Honestly the carrying case was a big sale point for me as I always have to factor that into the item as I like to protect my gear as a mobile DJ. It’s not big at all but idk how it compares to others. Feels cheap but really that’s not a knock on it just stating the facts. Instructions could be better but I got it paired pretty easily.
Van Life Geek –
I’m finding several uses for this affordable XLR transmitter & receiver
I have a few decent handheld microphones, and I have some wireless lavaliers, but needed a wireless handheld for various situations. Without having to invest in a new wireless handheld wireless microphone, these much more affordable devices (transmitter & receiver) allow me to use my existing microphones, saving me money I don’t really want to spend on a microphone that won’t get used a ton and is only needed occasionally.Plus, I found another good use for this wireless system with my gear. I’m using it with a Rode shotgun microphone mounted to the ceiling with great success. Running an XLR cable to that mic has been a pain, but now I can use this wireless system and eliminate the wire. That’s a huge win for me. Fortunately, this device provides fantom power which is necessary for my particular shotgun mic, so this product really covers all the bases for my situation.I have had no problems connecting the receiver to both a Tascam DR40 digital recorder and a Canon XA10 video camera with XLR inputs. I also have a small, portable audio mixer that would work well with this system, although I haven’t tried it yet. But since it has XLR inputs, it should work just as well as it does with my other devices. I’ll revise my review if it doesn’t work with the mixer for some reason.
Paul D. –
Works great, hard to set up, CHECK YOUR VOLTAGE
TLDR if you aren’t getting results and you think you followed the instructions to sync the frequency you probably haven’t set the voltage to match your microphone. Hold the volume button 3 seconds. 0V / 5v / 48V / Line (instruments)If you are buying one of these you probably know how microphones work but if you haven’t done much with them or aren’t familiar with how they work or you try to set it up without reading the little manual first it’s not intuitive. And we do live in a world where we expect tech to be intuitive. Even if you read the manual the English text is a little hard to understand and that could confuse people who aren’t very confident with tech.The non intuitive part is syncing the devices and setting the voltage. I think the syncing instructions are pretty clear but I’m very used to this sort of thing.You have two parts, the transmitter which has a display and should be attached to your mic or instrument, and the receiver which has LED lights and should be attached to your hardware – a computer, for example or your mixer, sound board, etc.Syncing:Turn both the transmitter and receiver off.Hold CH and power on the transmitter until the display begins flashing.Turn on the receiver. Check that the RF light flashes 3 times.Press the CH button on the transmitter to lock in the channel frequency.Done! They are synced. Troubleshooting: If you aren’t getting a signal you are probably not using the correct voltage. Funny return it for not working! This isn’t plug and play you need to set your voltage right.Voltages:By default the voltage is 0V which will not power your microphone. Some microphones are apparently ok with this, I don’t use those myself. Power is usually provided by the wire so you need to select the voltage that works for your mic, either 5v or 48, or LINE which is apparently used for instruments.To change voltage press and hold the volume button for 3 seconds. You have to do that each time you want to change it to the next setting. Honestly this could have been a switch or a separate set of buttons. Very not intuitive for something that needs to be set correctly for the product to function.I’m critical of the interface, but these work great.I did notice an occasional issue when testing it where my voice robots and drops out and i don’t know yet whether that’s hardware or software. It was like a buffering glitch where the audio cuts out if I talk too fast for too long, which sounds like my software. I’m going to assume that has nothing to do with the wireless signal but i thought I’d mention it just in case others share that experience.