very affordable 2.4GHz wireless audio transmitter-receiver kit


Looks good. Looks compact too. Perhaps many small parts that makes it hard to tally in the field?
 

Don't sell your Senny just yet. 2.4GHz is just 100ft and line of sight. Senny UHF has much better range
 

Ok. Noted.

I was thinking of capturing two individual voices (wirelessly). I only have 1 Senny. What is an economical solution to this? Thanks! :)
 

Ok. Noted.

I was thinking of capturing two individual voices (wirelessly). I only have 1 Senny. What is an economical solution to this? Thanks! :)

Ask your client to lower their budget. =X
 

Ok. Noted.

I was thinking of capturing two individual voices (wirelessly). I only have 1 Senny. What is an economical solution to this? Thanks! :)

How abt connecting two mics to a field recorder in two different channels and then sending the out the mix to the senny to send to cam. In post you can sync up the audio from the field recorder following the audio input in the cam if the original mix sent is not good enough...

Would be hard if the subjects are moving around though
 

Ok. Noted.

I was thinking of capturing two individual voices (wirelessly). I only have 1 Senny. What is an economical solution to this? Thanks! :)
Buy a $2 headphone jack splitter and stick that into the G3 transmitter. Connect 2 lavs to the same transmitter. It worked fine for me.
I would not recommend using bluetooth and UHF together. There is a slight delay in the bluetooth which will cause an echo in your mono recording because it trails the UHF signal. No problem if you use 2 UHF or 2 Bluetooth mic
 

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How abt connecting two mics to a field recorder in two different channels and then sending the out the mix to the senny to send to cam. In post you can sync up the audio from the field recorder following the audio input in the cam if the original mix sent is not good enough...

Would be hard if the subjects are moving around though

Thanks for the quality reply. :thumbsup:

Buy a $2 headphone jack splitter and stick that into the G3 transmitter. Connect 2 lavs to the same transmitter. It worked fine for me.
I would not recommend using bluetooth and UHF together. There is a slight delay in the bluetooth which will cause an echo in your mono recording because it trails the UHF signal. No problem if you use 2 UHF or 2 Bluetooth mic

Thanks for the quality reply. Something for me to experiment! :thumbsup:
 

Buy a $2 headphone jack splitter and stick that into the G3 transmitter. Connect 2 lavs to the same transmitter. It worked fine for me.
I would not recommend using bluetooth and UHF together. There is a slight delay in the bluetooth which will cause an echo in your mono recording because it trails the UHF signal. No problem if you use 2 UHF or 2 Bluetooth mic

Need to clarify with TS whether your "two individual voices" are two individual people standing apart from each other? Because if that's the case then Bamboo's method won't work without the mic wires being in the open if you can visualize what I'm trying to say.
 

Need to clarify with TS whether your "two individual voices" are two individual people standing apart from each other? Because if that's the case then Bamboo's method won't work without the mic wires being in the open if you can visualize what I'm trying to say.

yeah, i was visualising two person standing apart. But Bamboo's method, i learned that it can be done in many ways.

Hamanoshun, whats your suggestion/ previous experience?
 

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