Interesting! You'd be able to fit two or more together in the desk by using an xlr as a patch cable which might also help in the case of interference by running the xlr closer to your spot on stage for potentially better line of sight between transmitter and receiver. Seen this trick done with the U4 for iems. Would be interested to see if there is noticeable latency going wireless from the bass in to the helix and then wireless to the desk?
Hey!! thanks for watching. Yes, we have a couple running into the desk to cover mic's and sometimes my Helix. The only issue is that the spacing for XLR inputs on most desks is too narrow to fit two of these together. The way around that, is as you suggest, to use a short XLR cable. My Line 6 wireless has around 5ms latency (approximately what you hear when standing away from your amp), and these have similar. So... potentially up to 10ms latency end to end, but I haven't noticed it while playing.
Interesting! You'd be able to fit two or more together in the desk by using an xlr as a patch cable which might also help in the case of interference by running the xlr closer to your spot on stage for potentially better line of sight between transmitter and receiver. Seen this trick done with the U4 for iems. Would be interested to see if there is noticeable latency going wireless from the bass in to the helix and then wireless to the desk?
Hey!! thanks for watching. Yes, we have a couple running into the desk to cover mic's and sometimes my Helix. The only issue is that the spacing for XLR inputs on most desks is too narrow to fit two of these together. The way around that, is as you suggest, to use a short XLR cable. My Line 6 wireless has around 5ms latency (approximately what you hear when standing away from your amp), and these have similar. So... potentially up to 10ms latency end to end, but I haven't noticed it while playing.
@@twistieonbass thanks, might give it a try, one less cable to plug in!
@@martincarlin1987 Absolutely!!