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RF Venue’s Customers Drive its Success

  • Singular focus: No RF dropouts or interference, so your message is heard
  • Proven technology: Over 10,000 global installations
  • Continuous innovation: RF Venue provides equipment unique in the industry, challenging old myths and assumptions with patented products that address the biggest challenges in RF
  • Broad applicability: RF Venue products work with any brand wireless microphone or IEM system
  • Trust: RF Venue customer satisfaction score is twice as good as the average company’s. And its Net Promoter Score is +67—few companies anywhere have a better one
  • Affordability and reliability: RF Venue products usually cost the same as or less than products from other companies. Example: Two antennas can be replaced with just one RF Venue Diversity Fin antenna — superior performance at lower cost

About RF Venue

Are You a Wireless Microphone Antenna Farmer?

antenna farming

All across America, clusters of blinking radio towers blight the horizons of cities both large and small. These are antenna farms. As ugly as they are, they’re a necessary component of cell and telecom infrastructure. Most antenna farms are massive ordeals, and include RF transmitters powerful enough to pose a real threat to human health. But we happen to know live audio pros sometimes tend small crops of antennas themselves, often behind a multi-unit wireless microphone rack with all the original whips.

Packing a large number of omnidirectional antennas into a small space increases the likelihood of certain interference problems, especially intermodulation distortion. And ironically, the standard location for antenna inputs are the absolute worst place to put an antenna. With antennas plugged in behind the units, the signal clumsily passes through the entire rack before heading out toward the stage.

Solutions are pleasantly simple. If you’re growing an antenna farm, seriously consider feeding a single directional antenna into all your inputs using a distribution box. In situations where large groups of antennas are unavoidable, directional antennas offer a strong advantage over whips.

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