SKU: 28278490989

Hollyland Wireless Tally System (4 Tally Lights)

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Description

Hollyland Wireless Tally System (4 Tally Lights)The Hollyland Wireless Tally System (4 Tally Lights) is a professional, turnkey broadcast cueing solution designed for multi camera live streaming, house of worship broadcasts, localized studio environments, and indie multi cam productions. Instead of forcing production crews to string hundreds of feet of delicate, trip hazard tally cables across a venue, this compact kit replaces complex copper setups with a high reliability wireless system. Out of

The Hollyland Wireless Tally System (4 Tally Lights) is a professional, turnkey broadcast cueing solution designed for multi-camera live streaming, house of worship broadcasts, localized studio environments, and indie multi-cam productions.

Instead of forcing production crews to string hundreds of feet of delicate, trip-hazard tally cables across a venue, this compact kit replaces complex copper setups with a high-reliability wireless system. Out of the box, it includes a central Tally Station base hub and four independent, wireless Tally Light camera nodes, providing immediate on-air status synchronization for a standard 4-camera production layout.

Key Kit Capabilities

  • Turnkey 4-Camera Integration: This configuration comes pre-paired from the factory to streamline deployment across up to four individual camera positions. It ensures both the camera operators behind the rigs and the talent in front of the glass know exactly who is live, minimizing missed cues and awkward lens transitions.

  • Dual-Color Status Signaling: Each of the four light modules utilizes the universal, three-state broadcast visual framework:

    • Red Light (Program / PGM): Alerts the crew and talent that the specific camera is live on the master program feed.

    • Green Light (Preview / PVW): Signals that the camera is cued next in line to go live, prompting the operator to hold their frame steady.

  • LoRa-Powered 2,600-Foot Transmission: Operating over a 2.4 GHz RF carrier utilizing low-latency LoRa modulation technology, the system delivers an incredible operational range of up to 2,600 feet (800 meters) line-of-sight. The adaptive frequency hopping protocol detects local RF noise and switches to clean channels automatically, easily cutting through concrete infrastructure and metal stage trussing.

  • Smart Sequence Learning: The Tally Station features a built-in learning function capable of reading and adapting to different switcher voltage levels. This enables high out-of-the-box hardware compatibility with professional video switchers, including Blackmagic Design ATEM series, vMix software environments, Roland, Panasonic, Sony, and NewTek Tricaster systems.

What is Included in the Box

1. The Wireless Tally Station (The Central Hub)

The main hub sits right next to your technical director's switcher at the control desk. It captures live tally states via standard physical connections, transforms that tracker data into an encrypted wireless broadcast, and fires it across the floor with an unnoticeable hardware delay of less than 150ms. It interfaces via multiple port geometries, featuring a DB25 parallel input, an RJ45 port layout, and USB-C connectivity.

2. Four Wireless Tally Lights (The Camera Nodes)

The individual light blocks slide natively onto each camera package's hot shoe or rig cage via their integrated cold shoe feet or 1/4"-20 threaded bases. They utilize a dual-sided LED layout: an ultra-bright front-facing panel with switchable 3-level brightness for presenters, and a lower-profile rear-facing status indicator matrix for the camera operator.

Technical Specifications Matrix

Feature Specification (Full 4-Light Kit Config)
Maximum Wireless Range Up to 2,600 Feet (800 Meters) Line-of-Sight (LOS)
Wireless Frequency Carrier 2.4 GHz Radio / RF with LoRa Modulation Mode
System Latency Baseline Ultra-Low Transmission Delay < 150ms
Ecosystem Channel Support 4 Included Nodes (Station supports up to 16 channels for expansion)
Switcher Interface I/O 1× DB25 Female Input, 1× RJ45 Tally In, 1× RJ45 Loop Out, 1× USB-A
Node Battery Life Profile > 8 Hours via Detachable Li-ion Packs (Shared style with Solidcom C1)
Kit Recharging Architecture Dedicated 4-Slot Battery Charging Base included in kit

Seamless Intercom Cross-Compatibility

A major operational benefit of this specific system is its battery architecture. The detachable lithium-ion battery packs utilized by the four tally lights are the exact same modules used to power Hollyland’s flagship full-duplex intercom headsets, including the Solidcom C1 and Solidcom C1 Pro. If you are already running a Solidcom headset network on set, this universal design lets you mix, match, and hot-swap batteries between your intercom headsets and camera tally nodes indiscriminately, cutting down on the total volume of charging bricks and unique spare parts you need to pack into your production flight cases.

On-Set Channel Mapping Tip: Every individual Tally Light module features a digital selection screen or toggle on its chassis. When configuring your switcher inputs, make sure your software or physical pin mapping lines up precisely with each light's channel index. If your vMix or ATEM console has a stationary camera on Input 1 and a gimbal rig on Input 2, set those specific physical nodes to Channel 1 and Channel 2 before the operators walk out to their staging marks. The system includes a physical set of number stickers to paste onto the outer plastic shells, preventing confusion during busy multi-cam live switch workflows.

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SKU: 28278490989

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Verified Purchase
How Family
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 5
Great reference for college US History I & Ii.
Format: Paperback
My college course references this book for US History I & Ii at Temple College in Texas.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 21, 2022
P
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 4
A useful study
Format: Hardcover
This is a book that will make you angry. If you are a conservative, this book should make you feel very guilty. It is important to begin with that this book is a detour from Keyssar's larger project, which was supposed to be a history of the American working class' electoral participation. After struggling with the work for several years he realized that he needed to publish a whole book explaining what the right to vote actually was in American history. The result is a history of the slow and uneven path to universal suffrage in American history. We learn about the existence of the vote before 1776, the improvement that occured with the revolution, and the larger improvement that occured with the Jeffersonian/Jacksonian period in which the large majority of white men were able to vote. At the same time we learn of efforts to counter the expanding suffrage, such as disfranchisement of free blacks all over the country before 1861, attacks on the voting rights of paupers, felons, migrants and aliens, as well as the disfranchisment in the early 1800s of the limited voting rights women had in the early 1800s. Keyssar then goes on to discuss the narrowing of the portals from the 1860s to the 1920s, periods ironically bounded by giving the vote to blacks in the 1870s and to women by the 1920s. But in between that period nearly all blacks and many whites were disenfranchised in the south, while literacy, residence, nationality and registration systems sought to limit the vote in the North (while "asiatics" were barred in the west). The book concludes with the successful passage of the Voting Rights Act and the twenty-sixth amendment, but also with low turnout, an extremely narrow political spectrum, and government structures which limit political participation and reinforce conservative values. Much of this will not be new to historians, though never before has there been such detail and the twenty appendixes provided at the back will be invaluable for future reference. Sometimes Keyssar gives a qualititative estimate of how many Americans could vote (he suggests that perhaps 60% of white Americans could vote before 1776, a figure much lower than the 80-90% posited by more Panglossian historians). And there are many interesting details, such as the New York plan where registration was supposed to take place on Yom Kippur, conventiently leaving out many Jews. But otherwise the full results have been reserved for his upcoming work. This weakens his criticisms of American exceptionalism, since without a clear understanding of how much the vote declined in the North, we cannot see how fully the ponderous elitism of Parkman and Godkin were like the undemocratic aspects of German or Italian or even British liberalism. I am also do not agree with his description of slaves as a "peasantry." This implies that the majority of white farmers who were not slaveholders were a) not peasants and b) were otherwise indistinguishable on a class basis from the slaveholders. Recent southern agrarian history makes this assumption quite questionable. It is true that Americans were unenthusiatic as Europeans about the rise of the proletariat and rural subaltern classes, but it is insufficient to say that mass suffrage only occured because such classes were a small proportion of the population. They were also a small proportion of the population in France in 1848 and 1851 when universal male suffrage was declared, which did not prevent a greater degree of struggle over the question in that country. Enfranchising the majority of any population would raise serious issues of class domination and control regardless of the class structure. Nevertheless this is still a useful study, and reading the petty, racist, misogynist, self-serving and self-satisfied arguments against the suffrage will be a depressing experience. To think that such injustices could be continued for two centuries thanks to the endless cant of "state's rights" long after the republican content of that slogan had drained away will infuriate you.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 18, 2000
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Verified Purchase
Randall Lindsey
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
Unfolding of the right to vote in the U.S.
In my forty years of studying the history of the U.S., I find this work to be the most authoritative and complete work yet encountered. Not only is the book a thorough guide through the evolution of our democracy, it is an entertaining read. The book is a 'must' read for those who seek a perspective on many of the current issues involving voting rights.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 4, 2006
J
Verified Purchase
Jj7484
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 5
Typical for a casebook.
Format: Hardcover
I had to buy this for school. It’s overpriced and horrible to read but great for what I needed it for.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 29, 2019
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C Cox
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
Good seller
Format: Hardcover
book in condition provided in description
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Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2021

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