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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Looks nice, good construction and good value
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Looks nice, good construction and good value. Stays in place when tearing off sections of paper towels and looks more expensive than it was.
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MommaWolf
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Reviewed in the United States on September 19, 2025
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B. Marold
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
Great Guide for Specialized Bible Study or Pastoral Use.
Format: Hardcover
`Commentary on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament', edited by G. K. Beale and D. A. Carson supports the idea that given any approach to the examination of the New Testament you may think of, someone has written a book about it. And a superb book it is, if you have need for an examination of this subject from almost every angle. I say almost, because there is actually one thing I would like to have seen in this book, and it is not there. More on this anon. For the lay reader, be aware that this is a scholarly book, with all the Greek, Hebrew, Aramaic, and (I suspect) even Coptic terms used freely, just when I've gotten in the habit of tracking down Greek, I have to deal with two even more difficult languages. I mention that primarily for those who are allergic to footnotes and phrases in languages other than English. Otherwise, I am delighted in how easy the reading is in all the contributions from eighteen (18) major scholars on the New Testament. Much of this is attributable to the marching orders given to the writers by the two editors. This list of guidelines makes the diverse contributions very uniform, which contributes to the value of this book as the guide to a specialized type of Bible study based on this book's subject. Anyone who has tracked down more than a handful of OT passages used in the NT will realize that the NT writers often take some liberties with their interpretations, reading in a prophesy about Jesus which, in the original text actually referred to something completely different. And, one has also run across a wide range of different ways in which OT texts are used, from `exact' quotes to paraphrases to allusions. The editors address this range by asking all authors to address their OT citations from at least five different points of view. These are: 1. What is the NT context of the citation? What is the genre and literary structure of the book or chapter? 2. What is the OT context of the citation? Do these Markan citations come directly from Exodus, for example, or are they quoted from Isaiah's use of Exodus verses? 3. How was the OT quote handled or interpreted by Second Temple Judaism, or early Judaism in general? 4. From what text is the OT quotation copied. The Septuagint (LXX), the Masoretic text, or a Targum (scripture translated into Aramaic or Coptic). 5. What is the ultimate use or connection being made by the NT author's use of the OT. Is it simply to emote a connection, is it a use of a common OT idiom, is it a parable use, shorthand to evoking an OT story, or is there a belief that events in NT times fulfill a specific OT prophecy. Of course, many commentaries on individual NT books do this as well, but most do not go into detail on points 2, 3, and 4. In looking at those parts of the NT I know best, I find this book delivers everything it promises on these five points, but that the book cannot replace good commentaries and study Bibles for NT books. In looking at one of the most famous uses of OT scripture in Luke, at 4:18 - 19, where Jesus teaches from Isaiah 61:1 - 2, the authors, David Pao and Eckhard Schnabel cover all the editors' points admirably, including references to important opinions by famous scholars such as Rudolph Bultmann. For this passage and for all others in this chapter on Luke, the actual passage is NOT presented in any translation. Therefore, one has to have a copy of the Bible open to the passage, as you read the authors' interpretation of it. Less important is the fact that the explanation of this section of Luke on Jesus' teaching in the Nazareth synagogue says nothing about the puzzling climax, where the congregation turns on Jesus. But that is a logical limitation of the approach, and is not relevant to the subject of the book. The introduction to Lucan passages was illuminating, as it tells us that even though one of Luke's primary objectives was to show the resolution of OT prophesies, Luke actually uses fewer OT quotes than Matthew. This is rarely discussed in commentaries on Luke. So, especially with regard to the synoptic Gospels, this would be an excellent book to use as a guide to OT references in the NT. For the scholar, there is the usual tower of bibliographical references after each article, plus the usual index to Biblical citations at the back of the book. There was just one thing I wanted which is missing. This is a `reverse' index, if you will, of OT books, with the number and locations of where verses are cited in the NT. The reason for wishing such an index is as a guide to selecting which OT books may best be studied together, as with Luke and Deuteronomy (some commentators claim the 10 chapter journey of Jesus to Jerusalem is patterned after Deuteronomy). Ultimately, this is a great reference if you make a habit of studying NT scriptures in depth, as either a pastor or bible study teacher.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2007

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