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radio mic frequencies in the UK
I am taking two sennheiser EW100 radio mics to the UK and am not sure if I can use them or what are the legal frequenciesthey are currently set around the 790- 815 MHz range
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The licence-free frequency band is between 863-865 Mhz as far as I know, there may be others but you would probably be best doing a google search on UK radio frequencies for exact info.
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Does this mean that my current units are unusable in the UK? Thay are setting D units
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http://www.jfmg.co.uk They manage the spectrum in the UK. |
Hi Peter...........
Take a squizz at this, should tell you everything anyone wants to know about international wireless mic frequencies..............
http://www.sennheiser.com/sennheiser...requency-check CS |
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http://www.jfmg.co.uk/ to see for yourself. Sennheiser doesn't tell you which are the free licence exempt frequencies in the UK which Peter might be able to use. * Quote:
https://www.jfmg.co.uk/jfmgecom/JFMG...istration.aspx It depends where you are and what else is happening within range, but I've so far always been able to use the licence exempt frequencies without any problems - usually several channels at once. My EW100 G2 camera set sits on 864.375 and I haven't had to move from that yet. *Sorry Damian, you said that already. |
Thanks for the information. Is there any way that a foreigner can get permission for a short stay of two weeks. If so how do I do it as the licence registration seems to be only for UK addresses. The other issue is whether i can use the frequency range that my mics operaate in which are different from the standard UK ranges.
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You could always scan and see what's free on your frequencies and you might get away with it. Of course, you might crash someone's R/C model plane every time someone talks or come through on all the Gas Board repair vans in the vicinity. More seriously, you could never be absolutely sure that some R/F rubbish might come through unexpectedly on your receivers unless you were on channels reserved for radiomics in the UK. |
I've talked to JFMG and I can get a licence for my frequencies between 790 and 822MHz. The big issue is that I need a licence for every location which must be defined within 100 metres and each licence only lasts for 48 hours or else it gets quite expensive. I will probably hire units instead and use the free part of the spectrum.
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I'm shooting around Kew Gardens.
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Short of someone taking a stroll in Kew gardens with an EW100 receiver and checking out 863 - 865 MHz I don't suppose we can say much more. |
thanks everyone for your very helpful comments
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