Premium Members Dan Coplan Posted January 15, 2007 Premium Members Report Share Posted January 15, 2007 Jeff, Since you've tested all three at the same time, perhaps you can give us a more detailed description of the pros and cons of each. I have a Titan as well as a transmitter similar to the Modulus. To run both, I take a 2nd video output from the Titan and run that into my broadcast transmitter. Is that how you do it? Dan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Mark Karavite Posted January 15, 2007 Premium Members Report Share Posted January 15, 2007 Quote (CharlesPapert Posted Jan 12 2007, 11:14 AM) Hmmm, I thought I was trying to head off others from preaching to you. Oh well. No biggie. Dear Charles, I appreciate the thought, and your generous habit of supplying good advice on this forum. Mark Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Members Jeff Muhlstock SOC Posted January 15, 2007 Premium Members Report Share Posted January 15, 2007 Jeff, Since you've tested all three at the same time, perhaps you can give us a more detailed description of the pros and cons of each. Dan Hi Dan, as I have mentioned, each unit performs great in different environments, I can?t really say which is better or worse. I will say that it seems to be very helpful to have a choice on set, when one frequency fails, chances are the other type will do the job. Here are the basic pros/cons from my standpoint: Canatrans: Pros: 1. Great features! mainly, vari power output. 2. Clean transmission, overall very good broadcaster (arguably the best UHF available) Cons: 1. Price 2. Size and weight. Modulus: Pros: 1. Size and weight. 2. Price, if you already have one (no longer available new). 3. Pretty good transmission. Cons: 1. They get pretty hot (temperature). 2. Not all created equal, some seem to perform better then others. Some inconsistencies in there manufacturing. Titan: Pros: 1. Weight. 2. Color and picture transmission is great, at times the best of all 3. 3. Reasonably priced. Cons: 1. This requires a dedicated titan receiver, won?t broadcast to clamshells with tuners. 2. Performs best with a clean line of sight. 3. Susceptible to some interference from some wifi and cordless phones. Hope this helps, again, there is no perfect system, they all need a back up and they all are totally reliant on a good receiving position and setup. I have seen each unit fail at one time or another. It?s RF. Happy transmitting, Jeff Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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