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Reviewed in the United States on February 27, 2025
This wireless set pairs quickly and easily, has a nice form factor and easy controls.The sound seems a bit "so-so" to my ears (relative to "hard wired").Overall, it's ok, but the volume from the receiver to the headphones/ear budsis weak. I tried headphones and "in ears", both with middle of the road impedanceand the sound was the same...quiet.Fine for quiet practice, but otherwise seemingly lacking in output.
Richard Dean
Reviewed in the United States on January 7, 2025
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Turner Rider
Reviewed in the United States on January 7, 2025
I needed something simple I could plug into my lunchbox amp so I could monitor my guitar and hear what I am playing when playing with my band, and decided to try this unit out. This works great, and one thing I actually really like about it is that it has different settings for passive and active pickups, so you don't overmodulate the signal, and this is what makes this one different than other inexpensive units. Also compared to other units, I needed an 1/4" adapter to get them to work with my line out signal, and this unit has a built in 1/4" jack, which eliminates a cable and adapter for me, making this unit more compact. Sound is decent enough, and it works well enough with my in ear monitors that this is my new unit of choice.
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on January 2, 2025
It’s hard to find a good use for this kit. I wanted some kind of 2.4 GHz wireless monitoring system to use while recording music at home without latency. These aren’t great for that for a few reasons. It’s very easy to overdrive and distort them with a line level audio source. I plugged the transmitter into my keyboard and any volume level over ~30% would blow them out. My keyboard’s line outputs are usually very quiet, so line level audio isn’t exactly suitable for this system.One product photo shows a guy playing bass with the transmitter plugged into the guitar and a wire going from the receiver to his in ear monitors. So how does the audience hear what he’s playing? There is a secondary “Out1” output on the receiver that you could connect to an amp, but that raises another question. When would it ever be useful to hear your guitar with no effect pedals and not even an amplifier? I tried this setup with my bass guitar and I could quietly hear the clean guitar signal with both the guitar and the transmitter volumes maxed out. There’s no way you’d be able to hear it in a noisy environment.Another issue is that the jack on the transmitter is only mono. It cannot be connected to any stereo source, otherwise the signal will be canceled out. I tried connecting the transmitter to my amp’s headphone jack and it was just silent due to this issue. This also limits their usefulness for my original purpose – if I’m recording music I’d only be able to hear one channel at a time.One last complaint is that some weird choices were made for the hardware. This kit comes with a unique USB cable that goes from USB-A to both USB-C and micro USB because the transmitter uses micro USB and the receiver USB-C. That’s weird and inconvenient. Another problem is that there’s no volume knob, there are two buttons. The volume knob (potentiometer) is a simple solution that’s been in use for decades. You can tell where the volume is without even turning on the device. Yet on these there are just two buttons for volume up/down and no indication of volume level. You just have to guess.Overall these are really disappointing and borderline useless. It’s nice that they use a 2.4 GHz transmitter system and seem lag free. But in every other way they’re obtuse and poorly designed.
Sossity Pavane
Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2025
The in-ear monitoring system I tried was a letdown. Despite its promise of wireless convenience, the sound quality fell short, often producing static and dropouts during performances. The setup process was cumbersome, and the auto-pairing feature failed to work consistently. As a professional musician, I need reliable gear that enhances my performance, not distracts from it. Unfortunately, this system did neither, leaving me frustrated and longing for a more dependable option. Not for me or my personal gear but may be a decent choice for lower end gear. Sorry, just not for me.
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2025
it does not work right on an electric guitarthe sound is poori would not recommend
Cat Martin
Reviewed in the United States on January 18, 2025
I wanted to like these - I mean, I have great headphones that I can plug into my synth keyboard instead of an amp and hear what I'm playing without bothering others. But of course, that "cables" me to the keyboard and I thought, "Cool, this would be the wireless way." But no, these have such poor sound transference from keyboard to my ears that I'd rather be "cabled" with my excellent headphones. So...good idea, but needs work to make this item useful at least for my own use.
Kaoscapt
Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2024
This isn't so much an in-ear wireless monitor as it is a WIRELESS INSTRUMENT TRANSMITTER. One half plugs into your guitar or keyboard, the other requires an adapter cable to go from the receiver to your amp or effects units. When used as an in ear monitor, it works but it is monaural and you hear the output of your instrument WITH NO EFFECTS which would be okay for keys I guess, but not electric guitar. It makes me think they tried to make two different products and mashed them together into one. It does work, but it's not going to do the job I wanted it to. Guess I'll keep looking...
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