



A series of disappointments
Just a note ...
Switching between battery and powered requires that batteries be removed.
The transmitter turns itself off during quiet sections of music.
Power off returns the volume of full off requiring that you set the volume again.
Susceptible to interference.
In explicable audio drop outs (in addition to interference problems).
I shopping for remote speakers...
2009-11-05




Excellent for my application.
I have four of these speakers being driven from a PC. I have two additional units used for temporary installations. While my principal application is not for music, I have utilized the two spare units for background music on special occations. The units have all performed superbly well, absolutely noise-free; no clicks, pops or beeps (and I am also using a wireless router, wireless phone and wireless cameras). The transmitter is centrally located on the first floor; two of the speakers are on the second floor, one on the first floor, and one in the basement. I have been using these units for almost a year, the only issue experienced was due to a lightning strike that took out 3 of the 4 adapters; the speaker units were undamaged, and I have since installed a whole house surge suppressor. For those who have complained about the transmitter cutting-out, I would suggest you need to check the input signal level to the transmitter. The transmitter is designed to shutdown four minutes after the input signal level drops below a set threshold. It will automatically restart after the input signal exceeds the threshold for two seconds. User recorded MP3 music files are notorious for inconsistant signal levels, which can result in some music selections producing an inadequate input signal level to the transmitter. Music selections with a low signal level can easily be improved by downloading one of the free audio editors and normalizing the offending music file.
2009-10-28