AntennaWare BodyWave Antenna Showcases Enhanced Wireless Audio Performance

AntennaWare’s BodyWave Antennas aim to democratize wireless audio content acquisition in the broadcast industry.

Traditionally the high-end market for audio content acquisition for Broadcasters has been the domain of expensive products. The complex requirements around quality, latency and robustness have required bespoke designs for the front-end RF, meaning manufacturers are unable to prevail of the more cost-effective solutions, creating a binary choice between cost and reliability/quality.

AntennaWare’s BodyWave antennas are designed to address two of the major causes of dropouts experienced by wireless wearables worn close to, or on, the body – body blocking and detuning. By generating waves that flow efficiently around the body, BodyWave antennas support a wireless communication link where others fail, resulting in an increase in NLoS link budget of between 10 and 20dB.

For the broadcast industry, this additional link budget means that wireless wearable devices commonly used for content acquisition can achieve sub 5ms latency, delivering a robust signal for Non-Line of Sight applications based on competitive BOMs, whilst achieving the technical performance normally associated with more expensive products.

AntennaWare’s expert audio and technical team will be in attendance at IBC 2023, where the improvements in wireless audio performance and reliability achieved by devices incorporating BodyWave antenna will be demonstrated in a live environment.

UWB (for BodyWave 6.5GHz/Channel 5 and 8GHz/Channel 9) is of particular interest for the broadcast audio sector as it offers the ~5Mbit/s required for Linear PCM Hi Res audio, however to date, dropouts caused by body blocking and detuning has made it an unreliable frequency for audio applications where the device is worn close to the body. By addressing these twin issues, BodyWave technology makes UWB an attractive frequency upgrade.

You might also like...

Designing IP Broadcast Systems - The Book

Designing IP Broadcast Systems is another massive body of research driven work - with over 27,000 words in 18 articles, in a free 84 page eBook. It provides extensive insight into the technology and engineering methodology required to create practical IP based broadcast…

An Introduction To Network Observability

The more complex and intricate IP networks and cloud infrastructures become, the greater the potential for unwelcome dynamics in the system, and the greater the need for rich, reliable, real-time data about performance and error rates.

2024 BEITC Update: ATSC 3.0 Broadcast Positioning Systems

Move over, WWV and GPS. New information about Broadcast Positioning Systems presented at BEITC 2024 provides insight into work on a crucial, common view OTA, highly precision, public time reference that ATSC 3.0 broadcasters can easily provide.

Next-Gen 5G Contribution: Part 2 - MEC & The Disruptive Potential Of 5G

The migration of the core network functionality of 5G to virtualized or cloud-native infrastructure opens up new capabilities like MEC which have the potential to disrupt current approaches to remote production contribution networks.

Designing IP Broadcast Systems: Addressing & Packet Delivery

How layer-3 and layer-2 addresses work together to deliver data link layer packets and frames across networks to improve efficiency and reduce congestion.