15Feb Saramonic UwMic10 Dual Channel UHF wireless System Review
UHF wireless systems have come a long way regarding price and ability over the last five years. Not long ago, if you wanted a UHF wireless lav system, your two main options were either Sennheiser or Sony, with only a few somewhat suspect alternatives. However, in 2016, there are literally dozens of companies offering wireless lav mic kits and many of those are in the UHF band. With that in mind, let’s take a look at the $270 Saramonic UHF wireless lav system.
The first thing you’ll notice as you look at the Saramonic UwMic10 system is that it look very similar to the Sony UWPD11 system. Both systems share an all metal housing and very similar controls, but there are two very noticeable differences. First and foremost is the price. At $270 the Saramonic UwMic10 system is less than half the price of the Sony UWPD11 system. On top of that, the UwMic10 system offers up one other major feature that is missing from almost every other UHF system under $1000, and that is a dual channel reciever.
What that means is that the Saramonic UwMic10 system is capable of receiving audio from two lav packs simultaneously. As you can see from the screen above, “A” channel comes from one transmitter and “B” channel comes from a second transmitter.That’s a huge advantage in terms of receiver size,
That’s a huge advantage in terms of receiver size and capability for the price. The only other company offering a dual receiver UHF lav system is Azden and the 330LT is not small, well designed, or even remotely close to the price range of the Saramonic UwMic10 system. On top of that, despite the downsides mentioned in the video review, the UwMic10 is a much better design across the board.
At this price range the Saramonic UwMic10 system is performing well above it’s class. Audio quality is great. While I don’t really care for the size of the included lav mic or the heavy bass sound it adds to a recording, it still sounds very good for a kit mic. It’s much better than the lav mics that are included in kits that are far more expensive.
While I have a few complaints about the Saramonic UwMic10 system in my video review, the biggest one is the frequency range. As of this post, Saramonic is only offering the system in the 600Mhz band. While this frequency is currently open for public use, the FCC has been threatening to sell this band off for a few years. 600Mhz was on the auction block in 2015 and it’s back under public review in 2016. While the band is open right now, it could be sold at any time and that’s a noticeable issue.
I spoke with Saramonic about this and they’ve told me that they plan to release units in other frequencies soon. The Saramonic UwMic10 system sounds great and has a lot more features than UHF systems twice that price, once they have a few more frequency options, they’ll really have an amazing system on their hands.
February 19th, 2016 at 2:49 am
Great review, thank you very much.
I was into this kit until I know the battery life, 2 hours? c’mon…
February 19th, 2016 at 5:58 am
That time is with the transmitter at it’s highest setting and both receiver channels turned on. You can do better at low power single channel mode, but it’s still a bit hunger than my g3.
February 29th, 2016 at 7:59 am
Wow, another great review. I really like how well you review products. You don’t pull any punches and tell it like it is. That’s what a good review should be!
The problem you experienced when using mic and lav together is called phase cancellation. A simple fix is to swap the polarity (phase) of either mic. Clearly, the better solution would be to also include the ability to put the audio on two separate channels, but the phase cancelation issue can still happen if two input sources are close together.
As you mention, the 600mhz frequency is a potential issue. Why they didn’t anticipate this for the US market seems odd. The price is so cheap that this is an affordable option even if that frequency goes away…but why they didn’t pick a different range seems odd.
The battery life is really poor. Does using a lower output setting, which reduces range, extend the battery life?
April 22nd, 2016 at 8:35 pm
[…] that Saramonic dual channel receiver lav kit I reviewed a few months back? First of all, Saramonic has fixed the channel mixing issue. […]