Sounds like no. From the article:Soooo, my mics currently operating between 657-663MHz are fine, because they are within the unlicensed user part of the Guard Band, or NOT ok because they are capable of going beyond that frequency range?
The REAL question I have for Sennheiser is: Will you offer to change the RF module (for a reasonable fee), which is a very small part of the transmitter or receiver, or, will you force us to throw our equipment in the trash can like you did before?
Don't want to single them out, as Shure did the same thing, but if you ever had to repair one of their units you would see how easy it would be to do on a massive scale.
In my case, this time none of the major brands are offering rebates on my model AKG (<5 years old), so if there is not an update available for those packs, I will have to dump them.
I haven't read the details on Sennheisers rebate, but Shure will take anything that operates in the 600mhz range for rebate. The important part is that your new set comes from them.
@AudJ, Sennheiser doesn't spell it out quite as clearly as Shure but their rebate is also good across multiple manufacturers provided what you're trading operates somewhere within 608-698 MHz.
So what happens if i don't switch my receivers and transmitters and continue to use them after 2020?
So what happens if i don't switch my receivers and transmitters and continue to use them after 2020?
Thanks! Someone asked me and thats what I thought would happen.The FCC will fine you, potentially to the tune of tens of thousands of dollars. But that's not going to matter because once the new cell towers come online your systems will be relentlessly squashed with interference. T-Mobile is going full-steam ahead though, so you probably won't stick it out unaffected until 2020.
So what happens if i don't switch my receivers and transmitters and continue to use them after 2020?
Just want to circle back around to this. If I'm reading everything correctly. Any microphones operating in the duplex band between 657mhz and 663mhz or the guard band of 614-616 are legal? I'm looking at an Audio Technica Mic that has 10 channel options including: 659.375, 660.00, and 662.125. It appears using it on those frequencies is legal.Soooo, my mics currently operating between 657-663MHz are fine, because they are within the unlicensed user part of the Guard Band, or NOT ok because they are capable of going beyond that frequency range?
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