Wireless microphones manufacturer Revolabs is set to tackle the impending restriction of many UHF products in 2012 via DECT communication.
With the frequency changes in the UK edging ever closer, Revolabs, whose wireless microphones operate outside the UHF spectrum, will utilise DECT personal communication by operating between 1.88 GHz to 1.90 GHz in a digital spread spectrum space. DECT is an international standard that is used in more than 95 per cent of countries around the world.
This standard is dedicated as a personal communications space for short distance transmission and is regulated by a consortium that has been developed to work directly with each country to ensure compliance and uniformity in the use of the radio band.
Revolabs’ wireless microphones are also designed to offer flexibility, allowing users to mix and match microphones with any of the receivers within a specific product generation. This allows larger customers to take additional microphones from a room that is not in use, and move them to a more heavily used room without the added expense of buying additional systems.
Furthermore, the company utilises a proprietary 128-bit encryption authentication, which means that with its wireless microphones the actual RF signal path is encrypted, requiring any potential intruder to break the RF signal in order to gather anything.
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