Spectera Passes Test at 2025 ACM Awards At this year's Academy of Country Music (ACM) Awards, innovation wasn't only reserved for the artists onstage. Behind the scenes at the Ford Center at The Star, wireless RF technology was undergoing its own critical test: Sennheiser's Spectera, billed as the world's first wideband, bidirectional wireless ecosystem. While Spectera was being put through its paces in RF testing, the Digital 6000 wireless system, paired with both the MD 9235 and MMD 935 capsules, supported the performances of Blake Shelton, Kelsea Ballerini, and the Backstreet Boys as millions of viewers tuned in on May 8. Stephen Vaughn, RF coordinator for Soundtronics, was tasked with giving Spectera its first high-profile trial run in a live award show environment notorious for difficult spectrum and unforgiving conditions. Vaughn admits he was cautious at first. "Honestly, I was a bit hesitant. Given the environment we were in -- a live show -- I was already occupying a lot of the clean spectrum typically needed for RF use to ensure good performance. So, I had to place the Spectera system in a pretty noisy DTV spectrum. I wasn't expecting much in terms of performance, especially since I couldn't use a media converter to get an antenna out to the dish location. But surprisingly, the system performed well on stage and in the covered house areas." With testing limited to rehearsals and crew, Vaughn's team still found ways to put the system through its paces. They leveraged Dante from the control computer and streamed music to simulate real-world use, then distributed multiple packs for walk testing throughout the arena. "We had no failures -- except for some minor issues outside the intended coverage areas. Overall, it was impressive," Vaughn recalls. Spectera's wideband approach allows IEMs and mics to share the same TV channel, automatically coordinating all packs. The system constantly senses and adapts, so engineers don't need to wrestle with calculations or worry about local interference. "The noise floor was around -80 dBm. One cool feature is that it measures the noise floor while transmitting, so you can see what you're working over," Vaughn notes. What surprised Vaughn most was how reliably Spectera worked even in what RF engineers would consider "dirty spectrum" -- the channels typically avoided for mission-critical audio. "The biggest surprise was the performance in the DTV spectrum -- especially at those levels," he says. "Having the freedom to use the device without worrying about dropouts or interference is a big deal." The system's scan and monitoring features proved their worth as the team distributed units to audio staff throughout the arena. "I wanted to make sure the system could handle everything in real time -- scanning and operating all units simultaneously without any flaws or data crashes. Everyone who used them came back impressed -- with both the performance and the sound quality." Though Vaughn's expertise is RF, he experimented with two of the system's audio link modes: Live Ultra Low Latency and Live Low Latency. Operators can choose from 11 audio link modes to balance audio quality, latency, channel count, and range according to the needs of each production. With latency as low as 0.7ms, the company says, performers experience clear, immediate sound that's critical in live environments. "Regardless of the mode, we didn't experience dropouts or garbled audio -- unless we were really far from any antennas or out of line of sight," Vaughn says. "Even then, performance degradation was minimal. And that's an easy fix-just reposition or add an antenna. As a technician and RF provider, that's the most important thing: the ability to improve performance by adjusting antenna placement." Spectera's single rack-space base station and wideband channel made a striking difference in setup as the base station packs in redundant power and network (Dante, with optional MADI). "The single base station made things really easy. I could just place it on top of my rack and be done. With my other RF systems, I usually need a massive setup -- like a 32-space double rack... But with Spectera, it's just a single rack space. That's it. The compact size is amazing," Vaughn says. Spectera can be controlled via the intuitive LinkDesk desktop software or alternatively with Spectera WebUI browser-based management; users can adjust IEM volume, audio levels, or device health from a laptop, tablet, or even a phone. While Spectera was being tested behind the scenes, the Digital 6000 wireless system, paired with both the MD 9235 and MMD 935 capsules, powered the performances for the Ford Center audience as well as the millions of viewers tuned in for the broadcast. James McCullagh, front-of-house engineer for The Backstreet Boys, says. "The Sennheiser 6000 mics are fantastic. We have tried several different capsules over the years, and the MD 9235 capsule has the most natural response across all five vocals. Couple that with the fact that there is no intermodulation between the mics, and it chooses itself. Doing the ACMs is always a privilege, and this was no different - one more opportunity to showcase their signature vocal harmonies." "The 6000 Series constantly delivers. We take this system everywhere from tours to award shows, and it always performs beautifully," says Chris Diener, Kelsea Ballerini's front-of-house engineer. "The 9235 capsule is perfectly suited for Kelsea's vocals, and we are always hearing how much the shows love the frequency response for her voice." Brad Bailey, Blake Shelton's monitor engineer, says, "For the 2025 ACM Awards, we relied on the 6000 series with the MMD 935 capsule for Blake's vocals - it gives us the powerful, present sound we're after and holds up incredibly well in wedges, with great feedback resistance. We also used a full complement of Sennheiser Evolution series dynamic mics with Neumann KM 185 condensers on the drums, which gave us consistent, reliable performance all night. Sennheiser gear continues to deliver exactly what we need on a high-stakes show like this." For Vaughn and his team, Spectera's first real-world trial at the ACM Awards was conclusive: "The units worked flawlessly, even in dirty spectrum. It gives you confidence. You can say, 'Bring it-we can place it anywhere in the spectrum,' and still have it work well. That's a big deal for the future of live production. Spectera really feels like it's going to be an important tool for the future." 
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