Desview has announced its new Atlas X, Thunderbolt, and Thundermon (RX+TX) Wireless Video Transmission Systems.
Atlas X
The Atlas X is an Ultra-HD 4K wireless video transmission system with a claimed latency of 35ms low latency, a 3km transmission range, and it has HDMI and SDI support. Please note that 4K (UHD) video transmission is only available over HDMI.
Key features
- True Ultra-HD 4K
- Ultra-low latency of 35ms
- 24Mbps high bitrate
- Ultra-long transmission distance of 3km
- Automatic frequency hopping, anti-interference across the band
- Utilize the latest generation H.265 video encoding and decoding
- Full HDMI & SDI support
- Support UVC streaming, perfect for live-streaming
- Dual power supply: NP-F battery and a DC adapter
- 1.05-inch Full-Color LCD display
- Aerospace aluminum material
The system can utilize H.265 to further improve low-bitrate performance. Compared with H.264, it saves 40%-50 % bitrate while keeping higher image quality. The technology is also claimed to boost network adaptability, so it will perform more stably under complex network conditions, as well as support smooth transmission in low-bandwidth environments.

Atlas X uses Desview’s self-developed multi-band simultaneous transmission technology (2.4GHz+5GHz+6GHz+DFS channels), intelligently routing data across 23 channels. DFS channel delivers regulation-compliant and interference-free channels.

The triple-band simultaneous transmission is claimed to deliver an average one-to-one latency of 35ms in real tests.

The TX supports simultaneous HDMI input and SDI input, and HDMI loop-out for real-time monitoring. The RX supports simultaneous HDMI output and SDI output, so director monitoring, DIT backup, and streaming encoding can all run at once.

The 1.05-inch full-color LCD display shows signal status, channel band, and battery level in real time.

You can power the system via either an NP-F battery or a DC adapter.

Both the transmitter and receiver support the UVC protocol, so no drivers are needed for OBS and TikTok Live Studio.

Both the TX and RX are claimed to be made out of Aerospace aluminum material that meets military-grade anti-collision and scratch resistance standards. The built-in thermal system is also claimed to keep the core temperature ≤45°C under heavy load, ensuring non-stop, full-speed transmission without throttling.

The Atlas X system costs $769 USD.
Thunderbolt
The Thunderbolt is a 1080p Wireless Video Transmission system with
auto-frequency hopping—deliver zero-delay and lossless image quality, eliminate signal stutter
Key features
- Up to 400m transmission distance
- 1080p60 lossless transmission
- Automatic frequency hopping
- Flexible dual-power options
- Low latency of 60ms

The system uses H.264 encoding and decoding technology, which supports up to 1080p 60fps lossless transmission.

The system is claimed to have one-to-one 60ms latency.

The TX has an HDMI input and HDMI loop-out. The RX has dual HDMI outputs, allowing you to plug in a director monitor, assistant monitor, or recorder at the same time.

You can power the system via an NP-F battery or USB Type-C input. One NP-F970 battery is claimed to last over 6 hours.

The system offers HDCP Protocol Support, so your material can’t be accessed by others.

Both the TX and RX weigh only 197g.

The Desview Thunderbolt retails for just $119 USD.
Thundermon (RX+TX)
Thundermon is a 1080p Wireless Video Transmission Monitor system that includes one Tx and one RX unit.
Key features
- 1080p 60fps lossless transmission
- Operated via knob button+shortcut key+touch control
- Automatic frequency hopping
- Support 3D LUT, HDR monitoring
- Low latency of 60ms
- Support power supply via DC, Type-C, and NP-F battery

Both units feature a 5.5-inch ( 8+2 FRC) display that is claimed to cover 89.9% DCI-P3 color gamut. It has a claimed peak brightness of 1200 nits.

You can load up your own 3D LUTs or use Log-to-Rec.709 presets. It also has waveform, vectorscope, and the usual array of video assist tools.

There is a knob button so users can make fast adjustments.

According to Desview, in real-world tests, it delivers a transmission distance of up to 300m in open and obstruction-free environments.

The system can transmit and receive 1080p60 high-frame-rate video using H.264 encoding compression. It supports the 5GHz band. Its built-in smart frequency-hopping algorithm detects environmental interference in real time and switches to the best channel within 0.5s

You can power them via a DC input, USB-C, or an NP-F battery. One NP-F970 battery is claimed to last over 6 hours.

The Thundermon (RX+TX) system retails for $538 USD.


























