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UHF-R peculiarity
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<blockquote data-quote="john sulek" data-source="post: 51382" data-attributes="member: 201"><p>Re: UHF-R peculiarity</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>If by "advertised" you mean the range sticker on the units then they will not tune to the full extents of that range and this is true for the iem stuff as well.</p><p>For instance, band G7 says 506-542Mhz but it starts at 506.125Mhz on the transmitters and receivers. </p><p>As others have already expained, those ranges have to account for deviation so they wont match up to the lowest/highest frequency you can tune the transmitters to.</p><p></p><p>That doesn't answer your question of why some receivers tune to a wider range.</p><p>I would try phoning the support folks at Shure. They are great at helping out. And you won't hear someone flipping the pages of the customer service manual as they look for the next step.</p><p></p><p>Shure Incorporated Attn: Applications Engineering. Telephone: Work(847) 600-8440.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="john sulek, post: 51382, member: 201"] Re: UHF-R peculiarity If by "advertised" you mean the range sticker on the units then they will not tune to the full extents of that range and this is true for the iem stuff as well. For instance, band G7 says 506-542Mhz but it starts at 506.125Mhz on the transmitters and receivers. As others have already expained, those ranges have to account for deviation so they wont match up to the lowest/highest frequency you can tune the transmitters to. That doesn't answer your question of why some receivers tune to a wider range. I would try phoning the support folks at Shure. They are great at helping out. And you won't hear someone flipping the pages of the customer service manual as they look for the next step. Shure Incorporated Attn: Applications Engineering. Telephone: Work(847) 600-8440. [/QUOTE]
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