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About In-Ear Monitoring Antennas and Distribution

RF distribution and antenna hardware for wireless in-ear monitoring rigs, from single boosters to full rack distribution. The range centres on Sennheiser, with directional wideband paddles such as the EW-D ADP, passive omnidirectional antennas, half-wave dipole pairs and active combiners including the AC41 and the eight-into-one AC3200MKII, alongside Shure distribution options.

On the transmit side an antenna combiner sums several IEM transmitters into one antenna, which cuts intermodulation and clears the back of the rack, while passive splitters such as the ASP212 share antennas between receivers. Match every antenna, booster and combiner to the band you actually run: Ch38 hardware will not help a 1.8 GHz EW-D system, and Sennheiser’s boosters are band-specific for exactly that reason. Directional antennas buy range and rejection when they can point at the stage; omnis are more forgiving where performers move around the antenna. Use boosters only to make up coax loss on long runs, never for raw gain, and keep transmit and receive antennas physically separated.

Wireless RF is one area where a five-minute conversation prevents a bad purchase, and we work with these systems daily, so ask before committing to a band or topology.