

What This Page Covers
The rental conversation starts with the format, the room and the support needed to keep the kit working on the day.
Wireless video rental is most useful when the crew needs to see the frame without being tied to a fixed monitor position. Directors, clients, DPs and focus pullers all use the feed differently, so the package should be defined by who is watching and how far they need to stand from camera. That makes the choice less about brand names and more about the working setup. On a commercial day, wireless video may support a proper video village. On a corporate interview or branded content shoot, it may simply make review easier for a small team. On a documentary day, it can help the operator and producer keep moving while still sharing the image. The better the package fits the day, the less time the crew spends adjusting it.
What The Wireless Package Covers
- Transmitters, receivers and support items for clear on-set viewing.
- Options sized for director, client or focus-pulling workflows.
- Video village support when the production wants a more formal review setup.
- Compact and fast-moving configurations for smaller shoots and interviews.
- Crew-aware handoff so the feed stays practical and the setup stays tidy.
How Crews Use It On Set
Wireless video is a coordination tool. It helps the production hold a conversation about the image without crowding the camera position. That matters on agency shoots, because clients need to review without stepping through the work area, and it matters on documentary days where the crew needs to move quickly and keep the feed available while the scene is changing. The useful part is not just that the picture moves wirelessly. It is that the feed is where the right people can actually use it. If the director can stand near set, the focus puller can work the frame and the client can review from a safe place, the package has done its job. That is the standard the rental should aim for.
Prep And Handoff
Tell us who is watching the feed, how far they need to stand and whether the package is supporting a village or a small review setup. That keeps the wireless video request clear from the start.
- Mention whether the feed needs to support directors, clients or focus pullers.
- Say if the wireless package needs to stay lightweight for a moving crew.
- If the setup is part of a larger commercial day, flag the village requirement early.
- For China work, the broader Shoot In China network can take the next step.
Related Pages
Move into the most relevant kit and support pages from here.
Contact
Build the feed around the people who need to watch it, not around a generic spec sheet. Open Contact Page.