Learn how RF over Fiber improves wireless audio by enabling long-distance antenna placement, reducing interference, and simplifying AV system design.

In professional audio, live production, and broadcast environments, RF reliability is everything. Wireless microphone systems, in-ear monitors, IFB feeds, and remote antenna distribution all depend on stable RF transport. Traditional coaxial cable can work for short distances, but once the installation becomes larger, longer, or more complex, coax quickly becomes a limitation.
The Thor Broadcast F-RF-AUDIO-TxRx solves this problem by converting RF signals into optical signals and transporting them over single-mode fiber. This allows wireless microphone and RF audio systems to extend antennas over long distances with minimal loss, excellent noise immunity, and much greater installation flexibility.
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RF Audio over Fiber, also called RFoF for wireless audio systems, is a technology that transports radio frequency signals over fiber optic cable instead of coax. The concept is simple:
This architecture preserves signal quality over long distances and removes many of the problems commonly seen with copper-based RF transport. In practical terms, it means you can place antennas exactly where they need to be, while keeping receivers and control equipment safely in a rack room, broadcast truck, control booth, or equipment shelter.
Coaxial cable has been the traditional medium for RF transport for years, but it has clear limitations. Every foot of coax introduces loss, and that loss increases with frequency. In wireless microphone systems, where clean and stable RF is critical, long coax runs can reduce signal margin, increase noise, and create performance problems.
| Feature | Coax Cable | Fiber Optic |
|---|---|---|
| Distance | Limited, practical short-to-medium runs | Long distance, 1 km and beyond |
| Signal Loss | Higher and frequency-dependent | Very low over long runs |
| EMI / RFI Immunity | Susceptible to interference | Immune to EMI and RFI |
| Weight | Heavier, bulkier cable bundles | Lightweight, easy to route |
| Scalability | Can become complex with long runs and splitters | Excellent for larger and distributed systems |
Fiber is especially attractive in professional applications where reliability matters more than simply making a short connection work. For stadiums, houses of worship, broadcast compounds, and remote production facilities, fiber often becomes the cleaner and more future-proof solution.
The F-RF-AUDIO-TxRx is a compact RF over Fiber extender designed for wireless microphone and RF audio transport applications. It is ideal for extending remote antennas, transporting RF signals between buildings or rooms, and simplifying large venue RF system design.
Product page: Wireless Microphone RF Audio Signal over Fiber Optic Extender Antenna – F-RF-AUDIO-TxRx
Stadiums are one of the strongest use cases for RF over Fiber. In sports venues, antennas often need to be placed close to the field, stage, or performance area, while receivers and production equipment are located far away in control rooms or broadcast racks. Running long coaxial lines across these distances can create substantial RF loss and make the system harder to maintain.
With the F-RF-AUDIO-TxRx, antennas can be installed in the best RF location while the fiber link carries the signal cleanly back to the rack room. This improves wireless microphone reliability for commentators, referees, halftime entertainment, live presentations, and sideline reporting.
Typical stadium uses include:
Outside broadcast trucks and mobile production teams often need to deploy antennas hundreds of feet away from the truck for best coverage. Coax can become heavy, lossy, and awkward to manage in temporary deployments. Fiber offers a much cleaner workflow.
In a mobile production environment, the F-RF-AUDIO-TxRx allows RF signals from remote antennas to be transported back to the truck with less concern about coax attenuation. This is especially valuable for sports, concerts, festivals, red carpet events, and temporary live news positions.
Advantages in mobile production:
Large venues often need multiple RF zones. For example, a theater or convention center may need one antenna position near the stage, another in a lobby, and another near a breakout room or auxiliary hall. Fiber enables centralized equipment design where antennas are distributed remotely but receivers remain in one equipment location.
A multi-point RF antenna over fiber approach makes it possible to build more advanced wireless systems with better coverage and easier management. Instead of dragging long coax everywhere, you can strategically place remote RF points and bring them back over fiber.
This is highly useful for:
Modern theater productions often use many wireless microphones, in-ear systems, and backstage communication links. Reliable RF coverage is critical, but the RF receivers are often located in a separate rack room away from the stage. Fiber lets system designers place remote antennas exactly where they perform best while minimizing cable-related RF degradation.
The result is better consistency for actors, presenters, musicians, and stage management teams. It can also help simplify renovation projects where existing conduit space is limited and a lighter fiber solution is easier to install than multiple runs of premium low-loss coax.
Many churches and worship facilities have large sanctuaries, fellowship halls, overflow rooms, and production booths located away from the platform. Wireless microphones are used heavily, and antenna placement often becomes a challenge. RF over Fiber allows antenna relocation without the penalties of long coax runs.
This is particularly valuable in larger worship spaces where antenna diversity and stable wireless operation are essential for pastors, singers, musicians, and live streaming production.
In conference environments, wireless microphones may be used across ballrooms, divisible rooms, meeting spaces, and event halls. RF over Fiber makes it easier to centralize the RF equipment while keeping antenna systems close to each event area. This improves flexibility for rental AV teams, integrators, and facility engineers.
Sometimes the best antenna location is not near the receivers. It may be on a catwalk, in a ceiling cavity, at the front of house position, or in an outdoor weather-protected enclosure. Fiber gives designers the freedom to place antennas where RF performance is best rather than where coax length allows.
That flexibility is one of the main reasons RF over Fiber is increasingly attractive in modern professional AV and broadcast systems.
A common installation looks like this:
This arrangement is much cleaner than using a long analog RF path over copper. It supports better antenna placement, simpler infrastructure, and more predictable RF behavior over distance.
Integrators and broadcast engineers are often asked to solve difficult RF problems in environments where interference, distance, and space constraints all work against them. RF over Fiber gives them another tool: instead of fighting coax loss and compromise antenna placement, they can design the system around RF performance first.
This is especially useful when:
The Thor Broadcast F-RF-AUDIO-TxRx is an ideal solution for:
Wireless microphone systems are only as good as the RF transport path behind them. When antennas need to be remote, coax is often the weak link. RF over Fiber changes that by allowing long-distance, interference-resistant transport with better flexibility and cleaner system design.
Whether the application is a stadium, a theater, a mobile production truck, a multi-zone conference center, or a house of worship, the F-RF-AUDIO-TxRx RF Audio Over Fiber Extender provides a practical and professional way to move RF antenna signals over fiber.
Learn more about the product here:
Wireless Microphone RF Audio Signal over Fiber Optic Extender Antenna – F-RF-AUDIO-TxRx