🎸 Cut the cords, not the vibe — wireless freedom for the modern musician!
The LEKATO 5.8GHz Wireless Guitar System features a high-capacity 5000mAh charging case providing over 12 hours of wireless playtime, ultra-low latency under 6ms with 24-bit/48KHz audio quality, and supports 4 simultaneous channels with easy auto-matching. Its compact design is compatible with electric guitars, basses, keyboards, and other electric instruments, delivering interference-resistant, crystal-clear sound up to 20 meters.
D**N
Great quality wireless instrument transmitter/receiver
Lekato calls this a wireless guitar system, but I use it for my synth keyboard. The 1/4" phone plug transmitter piece plugs into the instrument (whether it be guitar, synth, or anything else that has a 1/4" phone jack) and the 1/4" phone plug receiver piece plugs into the amplifier or PA speaker (in my case, an Electro Voice Everse 8 PA speaker).I did a test where I listened carefully to the sound coming out of the PA speaker using first a cord and then using this wireless transmitter/receiver pair. I really could not hear a difference. I also did not notice any lag in response to my playing.Lekato claims that the transmitter and receiver will run for 5 hours when fully charged, but that may be a little optimistic. To be safe, if you are going to use this setup on a gig you might want to plug the transmitter and receiver into the docking unit on breaks.Speaking of the docking station, it has a built in battery too which allows you to charge the transmitter/receiver pieces without having to plug the docking station into wall power. That's very convenient.You often hear stories about wireless systems dropping out or breaking up, and I experienced no problems whatsoever with this Lekato set. I've had no dropouts, no distortion, no issues at all.I think this is a great little system and an excellent value.
S**N
Easy setup with great performance
I looked at a lot of options for cheap wireless guitar transmitters and this was at the top of my list. It fits well on my Ibanez SDGR bass and looks sharp. A long press wakes up the transmitter and receiver. I have the receiver plugged into an inline tuner that then uses a cable to my pedals. Pedals are plugged in via cables. Connection is fairly stable, even if I’m around my WiFi router which is a tri band router. I do experience a slight drop out if I stand too close, but I remedy that by moving the tuner (has the receiver attached to it) at least 10 ft away from the router. Sound quality is virtually imperceptible from cables and it remains a very portable and easy to use design. Changing channels is done on the transmitter. The receiver automatically switches. When I’m done with a practice session, I simply long press to turn off each device. I think the quality is good, with a well designed base that recharges the transmitters. The base also has an output for a tablet or phone and uses USB-C plugs. Overall, I highly recommend this device.
A**.
Switch your WiFi hotspot from 5G back to 2.4GHz
If I were smarter, I'd read the description and figure it out immediately. "5.8GHz Wireless Guitar Transmitter", they say. If RTFM more, "The full 5 GHz range spans frequencies from 5.15 GHz to 5.85 GHz".That means the 5G WiFi hotspot would interfere with this guitar system. And it does. The sound gets distorted (mind you, not your favorite heavy metal distortion, but more like drowning the amp in a bath tub). The hotspot loses the signal as well. If there is any other device connected to the WiFi at the 5G band, there will be interference as well.Switching the smart devices back to the older 2.4GHz WiFi and having only the microwave interrupting it is better.Other than that, the device is really good. The battery box uses the USB-C connection and stores and charges the transmitter and receiver. It it awesome compared to the older models of these systems where you had to charge them via two micro-USB. What is not awesome is the rigid form. While older systems were capable of folding, this transmitter tends to stick out and catch on the chair and other things.Bottom line: worth trying. Most of the times it works. When it works, it's magic.
G**N
Why are these so underpriced?
Owned the Line6 stuff for over a decade. Mind blown that these work so well and are so affordable. The power bank is incredible. I've never had a battery low problem and I use them all day teaching guitar.
B**.
Impressive
I recently tried out the Lekato Guitar Wireless System, and it’s been a great addition to my gear. The design is clean, and the charging dock makes it easy to keep both the transmitter and receiver charged at the same time. I appreciate the LED indicators that let me know when everything’s ready to go. The sound quality is impressive, and I enjoy being able to move around on stage without worrying about dropouts. It's even nice to use at home.
C**L
worked great for my 12 string guitar
Worked great for me and at a very good price
J**N
Super clean!
Sound was clear. Worked great for the small venue gig I played and way easier to use than my other more expensive system!
J**S
Was great when it worked. Don’t buy.
I purchased this back in October and was very optimistic. In reality this wireless arrived and was wonderful out of the box. I was thrilled, it sounded great, could hold up at distances, and isn’t clunky. I used this at maybe 4 practices before I started noticing that the docking station would only charge to 3 bars (now only charges to 1 bar). That was just the start. Now the receiver always sits on red saying it needs a charge. The photo is after having the docking station plugged in to the wall for 8 hours. Unfortunately for me all of this started happening right after the return window closed. If I did get a bad unit that would be great because I really liked this while it lasted. But given that I’ll never know if it’s a bad unit or just terrible build, I would recommend choosing a different product. :-/
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