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On Nov 18, 2:15*pm, philper wrote:
On Nov 18, 12:07 pm, (Scott Dorsey) wrote: philper wrote: In the motion picture and video audio businesses, VHF wireless has not been used in any professional sense in many years. *I don't work in sound reinforcement or theatrical audio but I haven't seen any VHF units in their racks in the last 8 years or so either. *Lectrosonics may still make one model of VHF wireless, but that design is from the late 1980s, is not diversity, not frequency agile, has none of the scanning capabilities of modern wirelesses and is mic-level out only. Yes absolutely. *(By the way, diversity helps the multipath issues with VHF stuff a lot.. it's more of a win at VHF than at UHF). *My point was mostly that there is a huge amount of old obsolete VHF stuff still in regular use out there. It is not a viable alternative to a 411a system. *For the statement that "Ch. 2-14 will be available for wireless mic use" to have any meaning there has to be equipment in that range available to end users. Maybe it means I'll be able to sell these first generation Lectro IFB kits that are cluttering up my garage? In any case, as I've aid many times, the end users will be screwed by this because they will have to re-buy all the gear they presently use and will not be able to sell their current gear except for salvage value. Sure, but folks should have expected and planned for that. *My worry is more that the stuff down on the lower bands will become an interference problem as well (note my later correction that the higher powered "white space" devices can use the VHF band). The above-700MHz closeout is just the warmup for what's to come. I don't think so... I think the TV broadcasters would howl if any more cutting was done. *What you are seeing here is a change that has been nearly 20 years in planning and it is the result of an extreme change in transmission technology. *This is a more significant change to the TV band than the 1954 addition of the color carriers... it's more like the dramatic format change that they went through in the sixties in the UK. What the wireless people are seeing is just a tiny little corner of a huge change, and it's a change that was made without thinking much about the wireless users. *But it's a big change, the kind that comes once in a generation. The push for this new "white space" service is something that was not planned, and was basically railroaded into the system by political interests at the last minute. *And that's bad, but it's a push that came about because some people with more money than sense saw the dramatic shift in the broadcast service and thought they could take advantage of it. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. *C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." And how do users plan to use equipment that does not exist? *You have intimated in many other posts that the problems we will be having with wireless mics are somehow our own fault--that we should have "planned " for this transition. *But since the whole white-space change has not been really mapped out or presented in much of any detail, how would planning occur? *I'm not interested in legal arguments or what technology will supplant what other technology, I need to know how to make purchasing and deployment decisions regarding wireless mic use for equipment that has to work for several years to make any economic sense. *The FCC will experience a huge pushback on these issues when a lot people begin to find that their equipment no longer works as it once did. These decisions have real economic impact on all sorts of wireless users, and rules made can become rules changed. Philip Perkins Exactly! I'm at a small arts organization that, between two buildings, own 10 UA series Shure wireless units (700-800 MHz) and need to know if I can still use them in my theater (inclosed, lots of steal, very few hits from convention center right below us). Do I need to buy something else if I get "caught" using the old mics or do I have to rent every time a client ask for wireless? |
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