La conținutul paginii

Tight AV Dante 2-channel Output Adapter

4.0 din 5 stele din 4 evaluări ale clienților

Dante XLR Output Adapter

  • For the output of analogue line signals from a Dante network
  • Samplerate: 96 kHz / 24 Bit
  • Robust housing
  • Fully functional Dante interface
  • Frequency range: 20 - 20,000 kHz (+/-0.5 dB)
  • Dynamic range: > 100 dB
  • Signal-to-noise ratio: >100 dB
  • Total harmonic distortion: < 0.01% (+4 dBu)
  • Requires POE (Power over Ethernet) for operation
  • RJ45 metal plug with built-in LEDs
  • Output: 2 x XLR Male
  • disponibil din Aprilie 2024
  • numărul articolului 590969
  • unitate de vânzare 1 bucată(ăţi)
  • Amount Of Channels 2
  • AD Conversion No
  • DA Conversion Yes
  • Max. Resolution Rate in Bits 24 bit
  • Max. Sampling Rate in kHz 96 kHz
  • S/PDIF Connecor No
  • AES/EBU Connector No
  • ADAT No
  • Word clock No
  • Number of analog inputs 0
  • Number of Analog Outputs 2
  • Headphone connection No
  • Special Features Dante
811 lei
Toate prețurile includ TVA
în stoc
1

4 Evaluările clienților

4 / 5

Manipulare

Caracteristici

Sunet

Măiestrie

4 Recenzii

google translate gb
Din păcate a intervenit o eroare. Vă rugăm încercați din nou mai târziu.
ZD
Noise Floor Amplification
Zbynek Drlik 19.03.2026
The problem:
When an audio signal at approximately -95 dB — essentially near-silence — is sent through the Dante network to this adapter, the output is audibly amplified into crackling noise through the subwoofer. This is not a subwoofer issue, not an amplifier issue, and not a network issue.
How we confirmed it:
We isolated the source by using FabFilter Pro-Q 4 to pass only a narrow low-frequency band at -95 dB. The TiGHT AV adapter produces clearly audible crackling from this signal. Swapping to the original Audinate AVIO Analog Output Adapter 0x2 on the exact same Ethernet cable, same amplifier input, same signal — complete silence. Clean output.
Both TiGHT AV units behave identically, ruling out a single bad unit.
Conclusion:
The TiGHT AV adapter does not pass near-zero signals cleanly. Something in the analog output stage — whether a poorly biased op-amp, an unstable noise gate, or a low-quality DAC with poor linearity at low signal levels — introduces audible artifacts where the original Audinate AVIO produces nothing. For any installation where the signal chain occasionally passes near-silence (live sound, theater, broadcast), this is a serious problem.
At this price point it's understandable to cut corners, but when a budget adapter amplifies noise that the reference device ignores, it is simply not fit for professional use.
Recommendation: Avoid for live sound or any application with a subwoofer or high-gain amplifier in the chain. Spend the extra money on original Audinate AVIO adapters.
Manipulare
Caracteristici
Măiestrie
Sunet
0
0
semnaleaza un abuz

semnaleaza un abuz

google translate gb
Din păcate a intervenit o eroare. Vă rugăm încercați din nou mai târziu.
At
Does what it's supposed to at a great price
Ade the Fade 02.03.2026
Using an adapter to get a quick in/out to your system is one of the benefits of Dante, as this can be done without having to run XLR cables, and without having to find spare XLR outputs. Such adapter aren't cheap (welcome to Dante) but the Tight AV adapters represent quite a saving over other products.
OK - the XLRs are not Neutrik (you could swap them out) and the RJ45 connector is not Ethercon - but the same is true of other, more expensive adapters. The initial setup is a breeze: I use static IP addresses and still got two of these things configured in less than five minutes. After that, you just plug it in, it pops up on your network, and you're good to go.
Remember, it's PoE so you can't use it without a switch, and it's primary network only: so not good for mission critical connections.
A great product and relatively inexpensive.
Manipulare
Caracteristici
Măiestrie
Sunet
0
0
semnaleaza un abuz

semnaleaza un abuz