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IEMs - Separate antennas or combine combiners?
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<blockquote data-quote="Brad Harris" data-source="post: 131502" data-attributes="member: 380"><p>Re: IEMs - Separate antennas or combine combiners?</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>I asked a few people as Sennheiser a few years ago with this same question, as on occasion, I have over a dozen antennas side stage for a large number of shows (3-5 AC3, 4-8 Receivers, com, etc), and usually 6-8 antennas on a daily basis.</p><p></p><p>The answer was a lovely Yes/No. They don't recommend more than 8 frequencies off of an antenna, and not to do the combining actively (ie, AC3-AC3). They did mention using passive summing, but you will have loss.</p><p></p><p>There's not many of these shows where flying a truss or not having enough floor space for antennas is an issue (well, until we discuss the video walls .....), and I haven't had much downtime (me, or equipment) to do some testing to find a decent predictable solution.</p><p></p><p></p><p>BRad</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Brad Harris, post: 131502, member: 380"] Re: IEMs - Separate antennas or combine combiners? I asked a few people as Sennheiser a few years ago with this same question, as on occasion, I have over a dozen antennas side stage for a large number of shows (3-5 AC3, 4-8 Receivers, com, etc), and usually 6-8 antennas on a daily basis. The answer was a lovely Yes/No. They don't recommend more than 8 frequencies off of an antenna, and not to do the combining actively (ie, AC3-AC3). They did mention using passive summing, but you will have loss. There's not many of these shows where flying a truss or not having enough floor space for antennas is an issue (well, until we discuss the video walls .....), and I haven't had much downtime (me, or equipment) to do some testing to find a decent predictable solution. BRad [/QUOTE]
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