Museums and galleries
Participants hear the guide in the headset, while the guide can speak calmly in rooms where everyone must hear without disturbing others.
Museums, tour groups and guided visits
With wireless headsets, participants hear the guide directly. The group does not need to stand close together, and the guide does not need to raise their voice. The guide can often carry the transmitter, but the route, distance and venue must be planned.
When it fits
A tour guide system is useful when speech must follow a group through rooms, exhibitions or areas where a normal voice does not always reach everyone.
Participants hear the guide in the headset, while the guide can speak calmly in rooms where everyone must hear without disturbing others.
The guide speaks into a microphone while the group moves through areas with traffic, wind or distance.
Headsets can make it easier to hear explanations in large rooms or production environments where the voice would otherwise disappear.
Up to 12 channels can be planned if several groups, themes or languages need to be kept separate.
How the setup works
The setup should be planned around where the group walks, whether the guide carries the transmitter, and whether several groups or languages are used at the same time.
You describe the route, rooms, group size and whether the tour is indoors, outdoors or both.
We review whether one channel is enough, or if several guides, languages or groups need separate channels.
The guide can often carry the transmitter in a bag or pocket. We review the route, walls, distance and area before the setup is decided.
We clarify how headsets are handed out, collected and supported during the event.
What we need from you
A good tour guide system is about more than the number of headsets. We need to understand the route, the rooms and how the guide works.
Is it a museum tour, city walk, factory tour, company visit or another guided experience?
How many participants will listen at the same time, and how long does the tour last?
Describe rooms, floors, outdoor areas, walls or other conditions that can affect range.
Tell us if there is one guide, several guides or a need for several language channels.
On many guided tours, the guide can carry the transmitter in a bag or pocket. This gives more freedom, but the route and surroundings still need to be planned before the event.
The answers are practical and do not include unconfirmed customer claims or absolute range promises.
A tour guide system is a setup where the guide speaks into a microphone, and participants hear the guide directly in wireless headsets.
No. The guide can often carry the transmitter in a pocket or bag. The route, distance and surroundings still need to be reviewed before the setup is decided.
Yes. Several groups can be planned with separate channels when the route, area and group flow make it practical.
No. The point of a tour guide system is that the guide speaks into a microphone, and participants hear the sound directly in the headset.
Get started
Send us the route, group size, duration and any language needs. We reply with a suggestion for headsets, channels and practical setup.
GoSilent is a B2B product from Silent Club and Norsk Silent Disco AS.