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Wearing the bodypack transmitter, Adjusting gain, Batteries – Shure PGXD User Manual

Page 9: Handheld transmitter, Bodypack transmitter

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BIAS

AUDIO

0dB

-10dB

AUDIO

0dB

-10dB

Wearing the Bodypack Transmitter

Clip the transmitter to a belt or slide a guitar strap

through the transmitter clip as shown.
For best results, slide the transmitter until the belt is

pressed against the base of the clip.

Adjusting Gain

Handheld Transmitter

Access the gain switch by unscrewing the head of

the microphone.
Use the tip of a pen or a small screwdriver to move

the switch.
0dB: For quiet to normal vocal performance.
–10dB: Use only if audio is distorted due to high

vocal levels.

PGXD

Batteries

• A fresh set of alkaline batteries lasts up to 10

hours (9 hours, PGXD2).

• The transmitter LED and the receiver ready

LED glow red to indicate low battery (typically

less than 60 minutes remaining).

• NiMH rechargeable batteries may be used.

However, the low battery indicator functions

differently. When it turns red, there may be little

to no remaining life.

• When the LED flashes red, the batteries must

be replaced to power on the transmitter.

PGXD

Bodypack Transmitter

The bodypack has 26 dB of audio gain

adjustment.
• Increase gain (clockwise +) for microphones
• Decrease gain (counterclockwise –) for guitars

or high-output instruments

For best audio quality, set transmitter gain so the audio

LED on the receiver flickers green and amber during the

performance. Decrease gain if the signal clips (LED turns

red).
Note: The amber LED may appear to be red when

viewed at an angle. For best results, monitor the LED

from directly in front.