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Sheriton

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  1. Sheriton's post in Cannot Update Firmware on XD-V75 Receiver/Transmitter! was marked as the answer   
    I assume you've looked at the photos / videos that show you exactly where the tx needs to be placed in relation to the receiver? It's a very specific placement - you can't just plonk it somewhere near.
  2. Sheriton's post in Problem signal N°6 xd-v75 was marked as the answer   
    3rd solution (not perfect but might be useful):
     
    Antenna A -> RX1 -> RX2 -> RX3 -> RX4 -> RX5 -> RX6
    Antenna B -> RX6 -> RX5 -> RX4 -> RX3 -> RX2 -> RX1
     
    You obviously lose a degree of diversity by chaining the receivers in that way but if your signal strength is good, you might get away with it.
     
    Edit to add: Either the seller was misinformed or they were lying.
  3. Sheriton's post in First time having Dropouts XDV-35 was marked as the answer   
    If your G30 TX is on the table alongside your V35 receiver, I'd say that's probably where your problem is. Putting a transmitter (even on a different channel) in close proximity to a receiver is asking for trouble. With analogue systems I'd call it receiver de-sense - the receiver is swamped by the nearby transmitter and can't pick up the more distant one.
  4. Sheriton's post in Can A Receiver Be Shared was marked as the answer   
    There are a couple of ways of doing this, although to be honest, using a second receiver is a better option in my opinion.
     
    You can have both transmitters set to the same channel and only ever have one switched on at a time. This method will work with any type of radio mics but does require discipline to work.
     
    The other option, which is somewhat unique to Line6, uses the fact that the receiver will lock on to the first transmission it hears and will completely ignore any subsequent transmitters on that same channel. When the first transmitter is switched off, the receiver will only then start receiving the second transmitter.
     
    As I say though, being able to control things from the desk is always my preferred option; relying on the presenters to turn their mics on & off at the right times is a recipe for disaster.
  5. Sheriton's post in V70 Beltpack Just Producing Hum was marked as the answer   
    That was my thought too although my assistant who fitted it assured me that it was secure. I've since tried to recreate the issue by loosely connecting the plug but as all the pins make / break simultaneously (unlike a minijack connector for instance) it was either perfect signal or silence - nothing in between.
     
    I'm chalking it up to experience but still hoping that someone else may have experienced similar who can shed more light.
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