How to Set Up ScreenBeam 1100 Plus Wireless Conferencing with Dual UC Cameras Using Inogeni Share2U
This article applies to ScreenBeam 1100 Plus product.
Modern classrooms and meeting spaces increasingly require multiple camera angles for instructor tracking, audience view, document table capture, or wide-angle + PTZ combinations.
The ScreenBeam 1100 Plus supports BYOM conferencing (Teams, Zoom, Google Meet, Webex, etc.) and allows users to wirelessly connect to in-room AV peripherals.
By adding an Inogeni Share2U USB camera mixer, you can integrate two USB cameras as one video source for simple wireless conferencing.
This guide explains how to wire everything, configure ScreenBeam, and verify operation.
1. What You Need
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ScreenBeam 1100 Plus (latest firmware recommended)
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Inogeni Share2U (USB 3.0 mixer with audio)
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Two USB cameras (PTZ, fixed, instructor cam, student cam, etc.)
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In-room microphone and speaker system (USB, HDMI ARC, DSP, or audio mixer)
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HDMI display or projector
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Network connection (preferred: wired LAN for the receiver)
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Laptop with Teams/Zoom (Windows preferred; macOS supported)
2. System Overview

The Inogeni Share2U blends two USB cameras into:
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A single USB video output (selectable layouts: side-by-side, picture-in-picture, etc.)
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Optional HDMI program output for preview or feed to a monitor
ScreenBeam 1100 Plus exposes this blended camera to the BYOD laptop through Wireless Conferencing, so Teams/Zoom sees one unified virtual camera, avoiding multi-camera enumeration limitations on Teams/Zoom.
Note: ScreenBeam wireless conferencing is limited to 1080p resolution.
3. Wiring and Hardware Setup
3.1 Connect Two Cameras to Inogeni
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Plug Camera 1 into USB Cam 1 port on Inogeni.
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Plug Camera 2 into USB Cam 2 port on Inogeni.
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Apply power to the Inogeni unit.
3.2 Connect Inogeni to ScreenBeam 1100 Plus
USB to ScreenBeam
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Connect Inogeni USB output → ScreenBeam USB Host port (USB 2.0 is recommended).
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ScreenBeam will enumerate the Inogeni as a USB camera virtual device.
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Wireless conferencing will make this available to the BYOD laptop.
Benefits: Best for Teams/Zoom; lowest latency; consistent camera enumeration.
3.3 Connect Audio
Depending on your room configuration:
If using USB microphones (DSP, boundary mic, ceiling mic):
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Connect USB audio device → ScreenBeam USB Host port
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ScreenBeam exposes the audio device to the BYOD laptop
3.4 Connect Display
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Connect ScreenBeam HDMI Out → Room display/projector.
4. Best Practices for Reliability
Network
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Use 5 GHz for Miracast over Infrastructure
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Avoid DFS channels if Windows clients struggle
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Prefer wired Ethernet for ScreenBeam
USB
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Use USB 3.0 cables from camera to for camera stability
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Power the Inogeni with its supplied power adapter
Teams/Zoom
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Only one camera will appear (merged by Inogeni), which improves stability
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If the user requires switching between two cameras, enable Inogeni’s switching or PiP modes