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Author Topic: Wireless vs. wired Latency  (Read 4485 times)

Charles Wick

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Wireless vs. wired Latency
« on: December 02, 2010, 05:51:08 PM »

Hello All. I hope your Thanksgiving weekends were enjoyable and relaxing. I have a question about wireless and wired latency. Currently, I have a set up that has 15 wired mics and instruments traveling in about 200 of snake. I am considering getting some wireless mics to reduce clutter and I was wondering if there was a formula to determine the latency of the wired instruments so I can match them up with the wireless mics latency? I do not know what wireless mics I am going to get, so I cannot tell you the latency of them. Thanks for everything and have a great day.
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Mac Kerr

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Re: Wireless vs. wired Latency
« Reply #1 on: December 02, 2010, 06:12:29 PM »

Charles Wick wrote on Thu, 02 December 2010 17:51

Hello All. I hope your Thanksgiving weekends were enjoyable and relaxing. I have a question about wireless and wired latency. Currently, I have a set up that has 15 wired mics and instruments traveling in about 200 of snake. I am considering getting some wireless mics to reduce clutter and I was wondering if there was a formula to determine the latency of the wired instruments so I can match them up with the wireless mics latency? I do not know what wireless mics I am going to get, so I cannot tell you the latency of them. Thanks for everything and have a great day.


Unless the signal path involves some digital conversions, there is no meaningful latency in either. Latency comes into play in digital equipment where processing, conversions, and signal alignment come into play. In an analog system it is not an issue.

Mac
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Charles Wick

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Re: Wireless vs. wired Latency
« Reply #2 on: December 02, 2010, 07:32:44 PM »

Thank you very much Mac. That is a great thing for me to know. have a great day.
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TJ (Tom) Cornish

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Re: Wireless vs. wired Latency
« Reply #3 on: December 03, 2010, 09:55:59 AM »

The electrical signal in a wire travels at some fraction of the speed of light, depending on the properties of the wire and the insulation around the wire.  For low-frequency signals such as audio, there's no practical latency difference between 20 feet of wire and 20 miles of wire.

A/D and D/A conversions cause latency - anywhere from .5ms to several ms, depending on sample rate and other factors.

Certain other mathematical operations done on the signal in the digital domain can cause latency depending on the complexity of the processing done.  This can also be several milliseconds.

Digital packetization of audio (IP telephony, cell phones, etc.) can create latency as the system collects a certain number of samples before transmitting the packet.  This can easily be 20ms in some systems.  This is one of the hurdles preventing digital wireless mics from being mainstream.

The big one, though, is propagation of the sound through the air.  In round numbers, it takes about 1ms for sound to travel 1 foot.  Stand 10' from the speaker and you have 10ms of latency, not counting any latency before the speaker in the signal chain.

Your application determines the latency you can tolerate and what you can do about it.  A band spread out on a large stage can have trouble staying together if they are hearing each other through the air.  Monitor wedges, or better yet in-ear monitors tighten up the time reference by getting rid of the 40 or 50 milliseconds of slop due to the stage size.

It probably doesn't matter for speech, as the speaker is going to be more bothered by the bounce off the back wall of the room than any monitor timing issues.

As Mac said - don't worry about it - this is one of those problems that if you don't know if you have the problem, you don't have the problem.
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John Roberts {JR}

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Re: Wireless vs. wired Latency
« Reply #4 on: December 03, 2010, 12:32:49 PM »

Another well known source of latency is even high speed signals sent over long distances.. like bouncing off satellites, or feeds from the other side of the rock.

JR  
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