Rocketboost. Engage.

rblogoBestbuy.com has just posted the four newest Rocketfish SKUs. The noteworthy element here is that they are all Rocketboost-enabled devices. The underlying digital wireless technology is based on Avnera’s AM2G wireless audio solution, which has undergone a spiffing up via some API goodness added to their solution to enhance interoperability for device makers and foster ease-of-use for consumers.

Currently, the initial RocektBoost devices are four unique Rocketfish-branded pieces of hardware that are sold as two bundles, and two add-ons. Let’s break it down.

The Bundles

The two main experiences that the bundles… or maybe more apt, the starter-kits address are:
1. Adding wireless speakers to your HD home theater receiver. (see RF-RBKIT below)
2. Playing music outdoors wirelessly to a weather-resistant speaker. (RF-RBWS02 below)

Bundle 1: RF-RBKIT – $199.99

RF-RBKITAs a follow-on (and significant upgrade) to the RF-WHTIB, the RF-RBKIT is composed of a “sender” and a stereo amp receiver, also sold standalone as the RF-RBREC. Compared to the original RF-WHTIB, which was meant to be a wireless surround enabler for entry-class HTIB systems, the new “KIT” is targeted more at higher end home theater systems… it adds more amplifier power (50 Watts per channel output) for two surround speakers, as well as support for two more wireless channels. This was a feature requested often by buyers of the original RF-WHTIB kit. This means that the new KIT can be expanded upon by adding an additional RF-RBREC (sold sep for $99) to enable either 4 channels of wireless surround sound for 7.1 setups, or alternatively, a set of Zone-B wireless speakers in another room for a 5.1 + zone B arrangement. Actually, it can enable more than a set… try 8 zone B receivers total on top of the surround speakers doing their thing in peace. Range for transmission is at least 100 feet indoors. YMMV.

Bundle 2: RF-RBWS02 – $149.99

RF-RBWS02The second bundle at retail is the RF-RBWS02. The bundle’s first piece consists of a transmitter, also sold standalone as RF-RBAUX, which is a cool little widget because it can receive audio too… very powerful (see RF-RBAUX below), along with a “wireless indoor/outdoor speaker.” The RBAUX takes any audio input via 3.5mm minijack and transmits it wirelessly to the wireless speaker. Again, range is 100 feet indoors… but outdoors may be quite more depending on obstructions impacting line of sight.

The Devices

Let’s review the four devices to clearly understand what capabilities each device brings to the Rocketboost ecosystem.

RF-RBREC – $99.99

RF-RBRECThe RF-RBREC is very simple. It’s a 50W x 2 (into 6 ohms) wireless stereo amplifier. It can be matched to any 4 to 8 ohm traditional (passive) speaker. The wireless amp’s design makes it suitable to hide at the back of the room, or to place on a bookshelf and control via the included IR remote.

RF-RBKIT-Sender (not sold separately as of this writing)

The sender has two stereo inputs in the back. Each stereo channel has speaker-level and pre-amp level connections via terminal posts and RCA (via included mini-jack adaptor), respectively. For any audio gear-head, a quick look at the back panel makes it simpler than it sounds.

rf-rbkit sender

When connected, each stereo input becomes a wireless Rocketboost “source” and is denoted on the front panel by “A” and “B” indicators, adjacent to the source enable/disable buttons. So now, any compatible wireless receiver can select either “A” or “B” content to render. Also, to satisfy the home theater application requirements, each source can be made “HD” by pressing an HD button. This allows the sender to meet the stringent SNR and latency requirements for Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD system approval. Home theater geeks may find this appealing, though I dare any normal person to tell the difference.  Another great feature, if i do say so myself, is the 4-channel lock switch.  This makes A and B receivers have exactly the same gain level, ensuring home theater AVRs can precisely tune the surround channels using whatever advanced features it has to do so.

RF-RBAUX – $59.99

RF-RBAUXThe RBAUX is my favorite, and yes it’s simple, and because of this, it’s also kind of awesome. It’s sold separately, as well as included in the RBWS02 speaker bundle. When included in the speaker bundle, the device serves as a wireless stereo transmitter. It takes line input stereo and sends it wirelessly. The real beauty of this device is that it also has a line output, so it can be used as a wireless receiver for any Rocketboost wireless source device.  The output can also serve as a loop-back for the line input… which means you can “splice” the RBAUX into your PC’s audio output, as an example, and still play the audio back through your desktop speakers, in the meantime trasmitting that audio to the rest of the Rocketboost network. Tres cool.

You can use the RBAUX in so many ways!  It’s like the 2×4 Lego piece… super useful.  Based on the Rocketfish SKUs, however, it is most obvious to use the RBAUX as either a Zone-B wireless receive adaptor for a powered speaker system (by pairing with the RBKIT sender), or as a transmitter for whatever audio device you want (to send to a outdoor speaker, a RBREC, or another RBAUX).

RF-RBWS02-Speaker (not sold separately as of this writing)

The wireless speaker is a bi-amplified, woofer+tweeter arrangment. It can be used alone as a mono speaker, or if you have additional speakers, you can let one render the R channel, and one the L channel, or both depending on your arrangement. The speaker is rated at 22 Watts, and can run on AC, alkaline batteries, or NiMH rechargeable batteries, which also charge via the AC adaptor – no removal of the batteries required to charge. Just be careful not to try and charge the alkalines… there’s probably a switch and a clear warning against this as is typical in this category.

Expand and customize your Rocketboost mix to suit your world

The point of all these devices being Rocketboost is this: all these devices work together! Yep. So, as a couple examples above illustrate, you can now really tailor your wireless audio experience to suit your needs as a unique consumer living in a unique home environment.

At the simplest level, anything that can receive audio, can playback audio from any device that can send audio.

A few advanced facts about Rocketboost that can help feed the creative/curious mind

  • Audio is sent across the Rocketboost network as 16-bits, 48 KHz, uncompressed PCM audio. i.e. slightly better than good ole CD-quality.
  • End-to-end latency for a standard definition audio stream is fixed, and around 18 milliseconds. HD is less. I’m not sure how much was settled on.
  • To start a Rocketboost network, the user must select one device to act as the “hub.” Only one device per Rocketboost network can be configured as the “Hub.” Any device which can serve as the hub has a switch on the back.
  • The hub will take care of all the pairing for adding devices to the network, as well as coordinate all the advanced RF channel hopping, quality of service magic, and interference avoidance that goes on. It’s the network coordinator. It’s probably best to make the hub something that is plugged into the wall.
  • If your needs demand it, don’t worry, you can set up as many hubs as you want, but just know that when you do so, you’ll be creating parallel universes from a network perspective, so devices paired to one hub cannot send or receive audio to devices paired to another hub. (To get real geeky, each network also will need one-third of the available RF 2.4 GHz spectrum. So in most cases you will be limited to 3 audio networks.. but you might get more, if they aren’t heavily utilized, because the intelligent adaptive channel hopping capabilities of Rocketboost are quite astounding… just so long as you aren’t in a crazy WiFi hotbed… as with all 2.4GHz stuff, YMMV.)
  • Any one network can support 10 devices, or nodes.
  • Any audio input will become a wireless audio source. I am pretty sure the sources are jack-sensed, e.g. RBAUXes won’t be eating up audio transmission bandwidth unless there is an audio device plugged in.
  • The audio network can support up to 5 simultaneous (stereo) sources transmitting at the same time. Any device on the network can be the source of audio.. not only the hub.
  • Inherently, any wireless audio source is one-to-many capable.
  • … because of the last four notes, you can see that the end-user created topologies for audio flow in the home can vary widely. That’s the point.

Hint: It’s useful to think of Rocketboost like plugging in and “erecting” local radio stations. Then, each audio receiver, whether it’s a speaker, an amplifier, or a line-out adaptor, can simply “tune-in” to one of these local radio stations. That’s kind of the notion underlying the original system design by Avnera. Think about it this way, and you’ll start to envision how you can apply the products to your world.

Rocketfish’s initial Rocketboost devices more or less leaves control of your actual content up to you. It is more about connectivity and audio robustness. It’s lots of wireless audio sophistication crammed into simple, versatile end-products.

Have fun. Share your experiences here.  I’m sure readers would like to know how folks make the most of this new wireless audio capability.

Disclaimer: When I was with Avnera, I worked on numerous aspects of these products, from the early wireless chip definition, to supporting the spec phase of the end-products for the customer. That was a long time ago and things have evolved a bit since in the process of bringing them to market. So I am not an official authority by any measure… but I am a believer ;-) .

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18 Comments

  1. Richard
    Posted October 31, 2009 at 11:52 am | Permalink

    I purchased two Wireless Sender/Receiver units (RF-RBAUX) last night. I simply wanted to get music into my bedroom from the living room. I think these units have great potential, but I find the installation information to be severely lacking as well as what is available on the website and telephone tech support. Nowhere in any of the documentation does it tell how to use the remotes that come with each unit. The FAQs on their website are a joke (http://www.rocketfishproducts.com/t-faq.aspx) as they are completely non-specific and way too technical.

    Specifically, the feed into the bedroom is intermittent. On most of the time but cuts out quite a bit.

    When I called tech support I got someone whose first language is something other than English and she actually had no technical knowledge of the produt. Everytime I asked a question she had to put me on hold and go ask someone else. Unless I get some fast action, these units are heading back to Best Buy.

    I will never be able to understand how an manufacturer can think incredibly poor documentation and other services (web and phone) could possibly work in this day and age.

    Thanks for the opportunity to vent!

    Best,

    Richard

  2. Posted October 31, 2009 at 2:00 pm | Permalink

    Richard,

    What’s the distance between the two RBAUXs? If it is more than 100 feet, you may be pushing the limits of what’s possible.

    Are you going between floors? Walls? How many? If so, the more of either would decrease your range… especially if more than 2 or 3 walls. Construction materials used inside your walls may impact as well… sometime walls use aluminum frames.

    Did you happen to place either of them behind furniture? Materials and quantity matter here as well.

    Are they close to any object that have lots of metal in them like a home theater receiver?

    Just like the placement of subwoofers, you may need to try 6 inches here, 12 inches there to clear up any shadowing effects that objects cause to the radio frequency signals.

    Hope that helps. Let me know either way. Thanks.

  3. Posted November 7, 2009 at 1:29 pm | Permalink

    My only question left is, how is the transmitter powered? If its battery powered, its great for laptops, so you can move around the room and just have a transmitter next to you. If it HAS to plug into the wall, it would make this product useless at the moment. It would be awesome if they designed a USB version that would power the transmitter, and act as an external soundcard so you only need a single wire.
    Thanks for the details in the article!

  4. Posted November 7, 2009 at 1:52 pm | Permalink

    Wall powered stuff at the moment. Stay tuned, I’m confident USB will be part of the story to come. I agree, there is no elegant laptop solution at the moment. The way to work with PCs is really for those who have a notebook-on-the-desktop setup.

  5. Craig
    Posted November 13, 2009 at 6:09 pm | Permalink

    MTC thanks for your help and comments. I am frustrated because no one at Best Buy (in person or call in support) seems to know anything about this product.

    The brochure and ad says it can take music from your computer and send it out. How does it hook up to a computer? I have a new iMac with integrated/internal speakers (no speaker plugs). So I need to plug in the wireless transmitter with a usb (or any other comon coumputer data jack) cable. Am I to understand this cannot be done with the RBAUX?

    I would love to send my streaming online radio stations out to my existing living room speakers!

  6. Posted November 13, 2009 at 7:09 pm | Permalink

    Hi Craig. The new iMac (which is so awesome… I’m terribly jealous) has a headphone output jack. (see the port farthest to the left, here: http://images.apple.com/imac/images/features_ports_20091020.png) You can plug the headphone output directly into the RF-RBAUX’s input. This will setup the iMac’s audio as a Rocketboost source.

    Subsequently, you can plug some (powered) speakers into the output jack on the RF-RBAUX, to also retain your audio playback in the room where your iMac is. This is a very not so well known capability of RBAUX… where it can “loopback” the audio you feed into it. If you can manage to get it setup right, you will unlock your iMac’s audio for your whole house.

  7. Posted November 13, 2009 at 7:10 pm | Permalink

    of course, you’ll need a 3.5 mm stereo audio patch cable such as http://www.amazon.com/3-5mm-Stereo-Male-Cable-ft/dp/B0002ZPJZO

  8. Piccia
    Posted November 15, 2009 at 10:50 pm | Permalink

    MTC – wondering if you can help. Can the RBAUX connect directly to either a Samsung LED TV or the Comcast HD DVR receiver? I don’t have a theater receiver in my living room (separate theater upstairs). I simply want to pipe TV/Cable sound out to my patio?

    Thanks!

  9. Posted November 15, 2009 at 11:46 pm | Permalink

    Yep. The Samsung LED TV has a “audio out” jack. This jack will give you the audio you need to send to another room. Most set top boxes do as well. You sometimes have to enable that audio from the settings menus of the TV. The Samsung also has a digital audio output jack, but look for the other one, that is simple headphone jack style. On my friend’s LED TV it is one of the jacks that face out sideways.

  10. Michael
    Posted November 16, 2009 at 10:53 am | Permalink

    MTC,
    I purchased the Digital Wireless Speakers (RF-WS02) and the Wireless transciever (RF-RBAUX). I hooked up the speakers and the SENDER that came with it to an AVI Reciever & TV and it works great. I would like to also get those speakers to also play music off my computer.

    I am interested in hooking up the transceiver(RF-RBAUX) to my computer and be able to send my itunes songs to play through those same speakers (RF-WS02) but also be able to watch my movies (2 different sources) How can I get that to work? Do I need another (RF-RBAUX) attached to my AVI?

    Thanks, Mike

  11. Posted November 16, 2009 at 3:34 pm | Permalink

    Michael, So let me get this straight… you have three Rocketboost devices in total, one wireless speaker, and two RF-RBAUX’s (one came with the speaker, the other bought separately).

    You would need to set up each RF-RBAUX as a sender, plug audio output from AVI Receiver into one, and plug PC audio into the other.

    Whichever RF-RBAUX you configured as the HUB (make sure you only set one as the hub), you’ll want to pair the other two devices to it. So, make sure you pair the other RF-RBAUX to that HUB, and then pair the speaker to the HUB as well, the order you do this doesn’t really matter. So long as there is one hub, all your devices will be on the same network once paired to that hub. (fyi, if you have two hubs set, you in turn make two networks, and the audio can’t be “shared” across two networks).

    Now, both audio sources will appear on the same network. Meaning, the wireless speaker can listen to either source, one at a time. You can select between sources by pressing the Source button on the Speaker. This will act like a toggle (or a round-robin if you happened to have had more than two sources).

    Hope this answers your question. I am used to illustrating such things with sketches…

  12. DJ
    Posted November 18, 2009 at 11:51 am | Permalink

    Your detailed reviews were very helpful. Thanks!

    I want to know if I can run the output of the RF-RBAUX (used as receivers) into the AUX input on my existing stereo receivers and just switch the old-school receivers to AUX when I want whole home audio.

    You may have said this already, but I missed it among some of gear-head lingo ;-)

  13. Posted November 18, 2009 at 7:45 pm | Permalink

    Yes. Many speaker systems from the likes of iHome, Altec, Logitech have line-in jacks, or “aux” in on the back. PC speakers as well take line inputs.

    Any of these can be used with an RBAUX to get music into more rooms of the house. That’s really the primary use!

  14. DJ
    Posted November 18, 2009 at 10:28 pm | Permalink

    I’m not sure I communicated clearly. I don’t want to use a speaker system. I want to use my existing stereo amp and speakers by running the RBAUX receiving the signal into the stereo. I can’t fugure out from the back view image of the RBAUX what output I would use.

  15. Posted November 19, 2009 at 12:43 pm | Permalink

    Whatever it is… your stereo amp likely has a line input, so you can definitely do it. You need to use the AUDIO-OUT jack on the RBAUX. Then you probably need a cable like this to plug that audio into your receiver. http://www.amazon.com/3-5mm-Stereo-Male-RCA-Cable/dp/B0002KR1OG/ref=sr_1_8?ie=UTF8&s=electronics&qid=1258652480&sr=8-8

  16. John
    Posted December 1, 2009 at 10:04 pm | Permalink

    I purchased a pair of RBAUXs a few days ago, setup was a piece of cake, and it performed flawlessly the first day. However, after powering down both the computer and the RBAUXs and then back up the next day, I’ve since experienced an annoying amount of cutting in and out. When it cuts in and out, it looks like the power buttons flash, as though I have power supply problems, but that makes no sense, as one is plugged into a battery backed-up UPS…The distance between the units is about 40 feet, which is hardly pushing the limits of the advertised range, with one wall and a closet in-between…It even seems as though something as simple as walking between the units can cause a dropout. Weird, I know–and frustrating. Any suggestions? Thanks for your helpful posts.

  17. skip fraker
    Posted December 14, 2009 at 10:42 am | Permalink

    Is there a wireless headset compatible with the rf-ws02 transmiter?

  18. Posted December 14, 2009 at 10:50 am | Permalink

    Stay tuned. The Rocketboost brand will be on products that are compatible with the RF-RBWS02. Headphones should be coming.

    The other Avnera headsets talked about on this site are not Rocketboost, they use wireless system targeting stereo+voice applications.

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