User Manual

Troubleshooting
Power
Make certain that the transmitter and receiver are receiving sufficient power. The receiver requires 9V DC at 500 MA. The transmitter
requires 9V DC via alkaline 9V battery. Check the battery status indicator on the transmitter and replace if necessary.
Signal Source
Make certain that the source is operating as desired by checking source power, signal levels and connections. If necessary, bypass
digital wireless transmission and check the source directly.
Cables
Make certain that all connections and cables are in working order.
RF
Turn all known transmitters off. Check to see if the red RF LED on the receiver’s front panel is lit. If it is not lit, then the receiver is not
detecting the presence of RF signal on the currently selected channel. If it is lit, then the receiver is detecting the presence of unknown
RF signal. Check to see if any of the green Receiver LEDs are lit. If any are lit, then the receiver is detecting the presence of another
X2 transmitter set to the same channel. Locate this unit and either turn it off or switch channels. If none of the green Receiver LEDs
are lit, then the receiver is detecting confirmed RF signal from a source other than an X2 transmitter. Change the channel and repeat
these steps to locate a clear channel.
Issue
No sound.
Intermittent sound or distorted sound.
Lack of range.
Cause
Source malfunction. Improper connection. Multiple
transmitters are set to the same operating channel.
Transmitter has gone out of range. Transmitting
through metal wall. Unknown source of RF in local
area.
Improper or lack of antenna connection. Multiple
transmitters are set to the same operating channel.
Unknown source of RF in local area..
System not turned on. Source malfunction. Improper
connection or improper channel selection. Expired
battery.
Power, Signal Source, Cables or RF
Signal Source, Cables or RF
RF
See Solution...
RF Overload
This will usually not cause a problem unless you are using more than one system at the same time, in which case, it can become a
factor when maximum performance range is desired. For example, one performer is ~200 feet from their receiver and another
performer comes within one foot of the furthest performers’ receiver causing the furthest performers‘ signal to mute temporarily. This
can be avoided with proper planning. In any case, the offending transmitter’s signal will not ‘come through’ the other performers
equipment.
RF Interference
An X2 Digital transmission is not susceptible to interference in the traditional ‘analog’ wireless sense. An X2 receiver is will only pass
digital data that originated from an X2 transmitter set to the same operating channel. If this transmitter has a custom encryption
scheme, a standard X2 receiver will no longer be able to recognize or reproduce the signal. RF interference for X2 systems will only
become noticeable when a system’s range has been adversely affected or when the red RF indicator is lit without the desired
transmitter in use. In most cases, the system will still operate with an acceptable performance range even when RF interference is
present on your channel. Due to the anti-interference/anti-jamming technology of the XDR-95 system, you will likely never have a
performance negatively impacted by RF interference.
Increasing Range
For best results, maintain a line of sight between transmitter and receiver antennas.
Move receiver antennas away from metal objects or other sources of RF interference (such as CD players, computers, digital effects,
network switches, network cables, etcetera).
For multiple systems, make certain that each system is operating on it’s own separate channel.
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