NAMCIM Wireless HDMI Transmitter and Receiver, Designed only for Laptop and PC, Plug & Play, Wireless HDMI Dongle Adapter for Streaming Video/Audio from Laptop/PC to HDTV Projector
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Darel Ramirez
> 24 hourRange is not as good as advertised. Within 5-10 ft. it works great. 10-20 ft. it starts to lag. Beyond 20 ft. it wont let me connect.
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Cindy Munyavi
> 24 hourI bought this to transmit from a gaming console to a projector about 20 ft apart vertically, was not compatible with a PS5 but would work seemlessly when plugged unto a laptop with 0 lag time so it does work however it didnt work for my specific needs. Nice quality feel and finishes to the components however.
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Francisco
> 24 hourThe item works good, but the manual is not specific about how to use it… also the worst delivery that I ever had, delated, tracking not accurate…
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Thomas
> 24 hourI have avoided reviewing this product for some time in the hopes that I could get it to work. I am a professional AV guy, working in the theatre business for 40 years. Let me say that when this DOES work, the picture is great. Thfor a distance of less thane fact that it can be powered by a laptop and projector is nice. BUT I have never been able to use it for more than five minutes at a time without it losing sync. I tried re-syncing, various antenna locations, to no avail. This was for a distance of less than 15 feet line of site.
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Just Like My Dad
> 24 hourThe family media room is ideal to watch TV, movies and sports. But occasionally you need to pickup you sandwich and watch your program in another room This device is easy to install and setup takes 10 minutes. Just attached the receiver unit to your monitor and turn on the transmitter.
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serub
> 24 hourGood
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Holli Elliott
> 24 hourThe product worked great and was a huge improvement for wireless connection from laptop to the conference room tv.
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Annabelle Koglin
> 24 hourThis is a cool idea but when we plug the transmitter into the laptop to broadcast to a 43”’tv in our conference room, the transmitter loses the signal unless we attach a usb-c power cable to a charging cube and give the transmitter power. It when it works it works great. I used Velcro strips to attach the receiver to the back of the TV to hide it - only the little antennae hang down.
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Amira
> 24 hourFor those of you who hate exposed cables as much as I do, this is the neatest solution around. if you have a DVR, old bluetooth player, etc and dont want them sitting exposed right by your TV, this allows you to put them in a closet and connect wirelessly. Also, we sometimes like to connect a laptop to the TV with HDMI, so again, can just do that from the couch instead of having to put the laptop on a chair so its close enough to be connected with a cable. Super convenient, and worth the significant price tag in my opinion.
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WH
> 24 hourComes with every cable and plug needed, which was very nice. But, no matter what I tried, I could not eliminate the jitter. My configuration involved Apple TV (50Hz and 60Hz at 1080), a soundbar, and a projector. Distances were about 20 feet. 1. I tried going direct from Apple TV to the transmitter. 50Hz gave the least jitter, but it was still there. 2. I tried Apple TV to soundbar and soundbar (HDMI out) to transmitter. Jitter, same as above. 3. I tried Apple TV to an HDMI splitter, and one output to the projector and the second to the soundbar (using the transmitter to receive audio). This actually worked flawlessly while watching a movie one night. However, the next day it didnt work because the transmitter seemed to steal both the video and the audio in the splitter, so the projector never had a signal; I couldnt figure it out and tried everything for about an hour! I wanted the Apple TV and soundbar together because I have better performance when the Apple TV is plugged into my LAN rather than using WiFi. But the jerky picture using the transmitter was a deal breaker for me. I have TWO different transmitters, and they both have the exact same issues with jitter, especially at 60 Hz.