With the proliferation of wireless communications there is also an increasing chance for channel interference.
That’s why the AmpliVox 96 Channel receiver will help you ensure interference free wireless communication.
Here’s How to Change Channels using this 96 Channel Wireless Receiver
First find the wireless receiver on your unit and turn it on.
It will show the last wireless channel used.
You’ll be using either a handheld with it’s own built-in transmitter or a microphone with a belt pack transmitter.
Let’s first look at the handheld microphone.
Sync channels with the handheld microphone:
Turn on the handheld microphone using the switch at the base
To automatically sync the microphone to the same channel as the receiver, hold the microphone near the receiver and push the sync button on the receiver
Then push the set button on the microphone
After a few seconds, the channels will align
Should you want to manually change channels:
You can use the up or down arrow buttons on the receiver
Then hit the set button on the microphone
Select the same channel you selected on the receiver
Then hit the set button again to lock it in place
To sync channels using a microphone with a beltpack transmitter:
Sync channels with beltpack transmitter:
First turn on the transmitter
Then push the sync button on the receiver
Followed by the set button on the beltpack transmitter
The channels will automatically sync
For Manual Channel Switching:
First toggle to a new channel on the receiver using the up or down arrow buttons
Then push the set button on the beltpack transmitter matching the channel on the receiver
Then push the set button again to lock the channel in place
AmpliVox helps you enjoy interference free wireless communication.
The susceptibility of older people to infection, serious complications, and death from COVID-19 is troubling.
A USA Today analysis found that in 341 counties -- 11 percent of all U.S. counties -- at least a quarter of residents are 65 or older. Meanwhile, the Census estimates that only 16 percent of the national population is over 65.
Coronavirus cases could soar in these US counties with high populations of senior citizens:
Texas has the most number of senior-heavy counties with 27
followed by Nebraska
Michigan
Montana
Florida
and North Carolina
In addition, 83 percent of senior-heavy counties are classified by the Census as rural, which means their residents are farther from medical and social services.
Many healthcare specialists are very worried that high rates of contagion in such counties could be catastrophic, particularly in regions where getting help often means long trips to lightly staffed and equipped centers.
"Now combine that with 2,000 rural hospitals where 1,300 have 25 or fewer beds, half of which have just one ventilator on site. Our system was designed for efficiency, not surge capacity."
Another major problem for rural seniors during the pandemic is sporadic broadband access, which is crucial for telemedicine visits.
As a Supporting Industry Partner, AmpliVox Sound Systems recognizes the importance of senior care and joins Argentum to shape the collective voice advancing excellence in senior living.
Through the virtual event, we can continue to educate and advance the industry on important matters through a medium more accessible and convenient given the extraordinary circumstances we are facing as an industry and as a country.
We can incorporate much of what we are learning as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as focus on what support the industry needs to get through – and eventually beyond – this crisis.
System Includes Wireless Microphone Receiver, Wireless Microphone, 1/4 inch to 1/4 inch cord for plugging into any 1/4 inch audio jack. Use with PA amplifiers or Karaoke equipment.
Also includes AC/DC adapter for microphone receiver, 9 V battery for wireless microphone.
Our experienced representatives are always happy to assist customers in finding the right products, and, we offer quick response to any after-sales trouble-shooting or support.
Commercial Integrator (CI), a leading trade magazine for commercial technology professionals, is a dedicated resource that focuses on installations, products and the business of commercial integration.
Beyond products and installations, Commercial Integrator tackles operational topics like job-estimating, project-bidding and big-picture market forecasting and more.
Craig MacCormack, Executive Editor of CI, recently video conferenced with AmpliVox CEO Don Roth to publish his story of fundraising efforts to raise money to support ocular melanoma research.
Don Roth still gets understandably emotional about his wife Nancy’s six-year fight against ocular melanoma, which she lost in September 2018, despite countless doctor’s visits, expert opinions and treatments.
But while Roth will likely never truly get over the loss of his wife of 52 years, he’s figured out a proactive way to make the best of it by working to raise money to find a cure for the disease that took Nancy’s life at age 76.
Roth has led efforts to raise about $35,000 for the Eye Tumor Research Foundation and the Ocular Melanoma Foundation through a GoFundMe fundraising page as well as partnerships with local restaurants and neighborhood businesses near AmpliVox’s headquarters in the Chicago area.
Among the local restaurants to donate portions of their proceeds to Roth’s fundraising efforts are City Barbecue, Eddie Merlot and The Warehouse, but they’re not the only ones, he says.
"My dedication and my goal is to raise money in many, many different ways for the Eye Tumor Research Foundation," says Roth.
AmpliVox employees “have all been very supportive in every way," he says, as have the company’s customers and suppliers.
"There will always be a little hole in my heart. They fill the gap when all of these people are so supportive," says Roth.
"Our customers and our suppliers and our employees have made our lives worthwhile."
"Many of them have been very generous," says Roth, noting AmpliVox also includes information about donating to the effort on its purchase orders and invoices "to get the word out."
Roth has offered to match donations at various times as well in hopes of generating as much support as possible.
Roth certainly will never stop missing his widow, but he has no regrets about the way they worked to battle her cancer as it metastasized and spread from the lesion in her eye to her liver.
Nancy Roth went through chemotherapy and treatments in Chicago, Philadelphia and New York hoping to be cured.
Shields and Shields in Philadelphia have a dedicated eye tumor research specialist hoping to solve the problem that plagued Nancy Roth and others whereby their DNA makes them more susceptible to the spread of the melanoma. Ocular melanoma strikes about 2,000 people each year, says Roth.
Shields and Shields recently named the patient consulting room in Nancy’s honor and memory.