🎸 Elevate Your Performance: Where Sound Meets Freedom!
The LEKATO Wireless Guitar System is a cutting-edge audio solution designed for musicians seeking high-quality sound without the hassle of cables. With a 2.4GHz wireless transmission, it supports both stereo and mono instruments, features a long-lasting rechargeable battery, and allows for simultaneous use of up to six devices, making it perfect for live performances and studio sessions alike.
C**M
Yes! Finally a stereo wireless trans/receiver.
I have an ESP LTD guitar that has a piezo pickup. One of the jacks is a TRS jack for outputting the mag pickup and piezo pickups on different channels via TRS cable. Works great. But also meant I was tethered to my pedal board. After searching far and wide and getting duped by other makes/models, I finally found the Lekato stereo wireless audio bridge. Problem solved.Sound quality is good. In fact, it's better than the other 3 sets of other makes/models I have. Battery life is good so far. I haven't tested out range yet, but most of the stages I play on I won't be venturing out more than 20 ft or so. In the practice room there are 3 other 2.4 ghz wireless units running plus the house wifi. No issues so far on interference.Build quality is good. Durability is always the big question that a lot of times only time can answer but these seem built well enough I could drop them on stage or even in the parking lot and they'd survive. I really don't want to test that.They are a lot bigger than my Lekato UHF set, but not so big it's an issue like some of those Boss units.Overall, these solve a huge problem for me and sound great and are at a great price. I would have paid twice the price. In fact, I did on another brand I though were stereo but were not, weren't as well built, and sounded like @ss. So kudos to Lekato for a great product and at a great price.
A**G
Impressed
I wasn't expecting much based on the price but thought I'd give it a shot. Works awesome. The sound is great. No different than using a quality cable. The connection is stable and the battery life seems to last a really long time. I played for about 3 hours yesterday and didn't need to recharge. Highly recommend.
K**N
Use the mono plugs that came with it for guitars!
No audio from active/passive pickups with the "stereo" 1/4 adapter that installed by default. I almost thought it was defective but i could hear the ground noise when i touched the ends of the transmitter. I then checked the box and found 2 mono 1/4" adapters. These transferred the sound of all my active pickup acoustics including lr baggs anthem, custom 3 way active pickups and more. Sound is pretty good so far but i did get crackling and noise after 5 minutes of use. However, I have not charged the units yet so that could be battery low/weak signal issue. I will update this review after a full charge and a real gig test (3 hour show) but i did notice A LOT of return reviews stating its not working as intended. I'm not sure of "true stereo" issue.. but it was not my intent. However, if it does work, i will use this for my stereo keyboard headphone jack stereo out on occasion. For standard instrument jacks (mono). Try the mono adapters before returning like so many have. Update forthcoming but i simply wanted to get this info out there.UPDATE! I have gigged a few times with these now and I gotta say these are very handy. They can pick up some 2.4 interference on occasion but some slight movement adjustments seem to calm the 2.4 hum abit if close to a router. Anyhow. THESE ARE TRUE STEREO.. or mono.. depending on the which adapter you choose for it. I have two of these.. One of these is used for my MODX in stereo out of the 1/4" headphone jack out. connecting to 1/8" stereo aux input on the back of my sound rig. I do get separated l/r data and run a stereo speaker setup. Works well. The other one im using the mono adapters plugged into my taylor with Anthem system. It also works quite well. They can also be used to daisy chain speakers xlr out (with a $5 xlr-to female 1/4") or 1/4" mix out/monitor out) pretty well since it transmits line level audio well. (I mention this because several "xlr" wireless transmitters are built around mic input levels so they end up completely overgaining line level to distortion. If you are looking for an xlr transmitter to link speakers or line level outs on a mixer.. make sure you get one that has a selectable Line/Mic impedance switch on it. Hope that helps. Overall quite happy having my keyboard in full stereo .. and my acoustic completely wireless into a 2 everse 8 stereo config (also wireless/ battery powered) In this way. I have ZERO wires for gig.. not even a speaker power cable :)..
P**J
It does stereo, has no detectable latency and the volume is great.
I have been interested in securing a product like this to provide stereo connectivity and it works very well with my keyboard and mixer. It’s easy to install and use; plug and play - pairing was simple and quick.My pleasant surprise was it working with my video camera. Now I can put a proper soundtrack on my video recordings if I want which will allow for easy synchronization with multiple feeds.I got it at a discount but the value at full is still great for what it does. Lekato does it again for me.
J**Y
Works great
I bought this to use with my outdoor projector and speaker so I wasn't tethered by an audio jack. Works perfect! I'm gonna try it with our electric bass next time my band plays. Would definitely offer some freedom!!!
R**N
Ok, but not as reliable as I had hoped
Easy to use, came pre-charged, just switch it on and play. Worked just fine in my practice room.I bought this one AND the Getaria 5.8 GHz unit, thinking I would bring both to a gig and be able to swap quickly in case of failure. BOTH of these products suffer the same issues, so I'm pretty much pasting the same comments here as I did on that other unit.When in the same room as the amp, it works fine. I bought this to be a simple solution for my bass rig; I don't want to use my G50 for bass (I have to pull it off my guitar pedal board). I absolutely love the idea of these tiny things: no belt packs, no batteries, SO easy. What's the problem? well... sound quality on my bass is BETTER than the Getaria, but STILL, in a band environment, perfect tone is not the deal breaker.The problem is dropouts, loss of signal, and the fact that unless the transmitter/reciever are line-of-sight with one another, it is NOT reliable. As soon as a person, or a speaker, or ANYTHING comes between them it drops, flubs, sounds bad, makes odd noise. Even at home, I can't leave my practice room and get reliable signal. So yeah... you get what you pay for.I'm still gonna try it again, at a few more gigs, see if there is a trick to make it work better. But I'm not leaving home without the G50 as a standby backup... and the MINUTE I get dropouts? game over.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
4 days ago