cineko Posted January 24, 2019 Share Posted January 24, 2019 I'm puzzled and dissapointed. Have used a G30 system for years and years with superb results, never had any problems. Last week I bought two new G30's and have experienced many, many dropouts on both of them. So I conclude that the hardware has changed and that the new stuff does not have such a robust signal or could it be possible that I have two faulty units? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pinoguitar Posted January 29, 2019 Share Posted January 29, 2019 I have exactly the same experience! Is there any comment of line6? Did line6 do changes at newer models? Because my old G30 is still running perfect. An I have both now here, old and new and can compare them. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
littleeden Posted February 24, 2019 Share Posted February 24, 2019 (edited) I just bought a G30 and have gigged it twice. On the first occasion, there were a couple of dropouts, but last night it got really flaky. Not only did I have multiple dropouts, but on three or four occasions, it stopped working altogether, and I had to switch the transmitter off and back on to get it working again - not what you want to be doing mid-song! I'd checked the battery status indicators on both the transmitter and the receiver, and both were showing green. On examining it this morning, I was able to replicate this behaviour by pressing on the battery compartment door. I tried this because I remember that before at leas two of the crashes, I'd either knocked the unit (backing into a mic stand), or squeezed it (taking it off my strap when changing guitars). When I did that, I saw that the battery light on the transmitter started plashing purple, and at the same time, the audio light was flashing yellow. While this was happening, the signal status LEDs on the receiver showed nothing, and the battery status LEDs showed one or two red. Notwithstanding the battery status indicators I mentioned in my first paragraph, I swapped in a new set of batteries, and was unable to replicate the fault. Putting the old batteries back in let me get the fault again. From this, I deduce that: the battery status lights on both on the transmitter and the receiver do not give a reliable indication when the batteries start getting a little low, somehow the battery door on the transmitter becomes very sensitive to small bumps and pressure, causing the unit to crash I realise now, of course, I should have swapped in a brand-new set batteries before each gig, but I didn't expect the battery indicators to be so inaccurate, or for the unit to be so sensitive when battery power got a little low. Does anyone else have any thoughts about this? Edit: have opened a support ticket, so we'll see what they say. Edited February 24, 2019 by littleeden Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
littleeden Posted February 25, 2019 Share Posted February 25, 2019 Well, according to the response to my ticket (very quick, thanks), it’s a hardware problem that needs a tech to look at it, and I should take it back to where I bought it. So that’s what I’ll do. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dabber529 Posted May 21, 2022 Share Posted May 21, 2022 I have the same problem with two TBP06 transmitters; one in a G30 system, and one on an XD-V35 mic system. They both work without problems with fresh batteries, but once the batteries have done maybe an hour's service they become sensitive to pressure on the battery door. It's a strange fault, but obviously not such an isolated one. Littleeden, did you get the problem sorted out? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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