Yes, if the range is pretty short, and you don't have a lot of walls and/or a wireless LAN in your home, this product is OK. However, I found the signal was too weak for a solid and clear picture trying to transmit about 60 ft through several walls from one end of the house to the other. Yes, I have a wireless LAN and a microwave oven etc like probably the majority of the folks who buy these kind of gadgets.
I came up with an idea and have completed a modification that works incredibly well. What I did was cut off the crappy stock antennas and put RP-TNC jacks on both the sender and receiver units. I then hooked up a couple of 8" square flat panel directional Wi-Fi patch antennas. The antennas are hidden behind a picture frame and a stereo speaker. Totally invisible as my wife requires it
This obviously voids the warranty, but I have crystal clear video now and I'm very happy. This has caused no problems with the wi-fi LAN in my house either.
I'm probably the first to hack these new video sender units but expect others will probably get the same idea to do something similar. The complete mod cost me less than $60 for the two antennas and RP-TNC connectors. Whatever you do, don't use omni-directional antennas if you want to try to hack these. You need directional antennas properly aimmed point-to-point between sender and receiver. That way you keep interference down and you don't generate excess interference yourself.
The only issue I have to resolve is getting the IR-repeater with these working. It doesn't work with my sat receiver, thus that's why I'm checking out this thread for ideas as to whether or not the IR feature is junk or it really works.
dseven