How about another person standing next to you singing along? Boom, louder, and no electronics involved at the campfire.
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Sorry, you totally overestimate how loud they will sing, how much people already sitting are willing to move and underestimate how loud the surounding talking can be. If it where that easy I wouldn't ask this question here. I've often received feedback, that they really like, that I push the singing in the group, though that doesn't mean, that many people would step up and sing loud with me (at least as long as there is no huge crowd singing, or where they can just bawl instead of sing). Peoples inertia is unbelievably big. And in 2 months I will be at a camp with 120 people, so not as small as normally.
I like the Bluetooth speaker idea, but if that doesn't work I've seen tour guides on buses/boats use portable karaoke machines for this. One problem might be that they add reverb by default which may not be desirable in this scenario, and I'm not sure if you can turn it off.
Edit: just thinking about this, there are systems like you're talking about designed specifically for tour guides or teachers. It's a mic attached to a speaker that can sit on your hip (for example.) They're probably well under your budget, even for a good quality one.
Thats an interesting idea. Might really try this. Though I'm not sure about the sound quality for singing in contrast to just speaking (that being the core purpose of these systems)
Bluetooth has latency; it's not suitable for realtime mic usage. The delay will make it difficult to sing/speak.
Yeah, I'm not sure on the quality either. Try to get one with a wired mic to avoid latency as much as possible.
Good luck.
An app to turn your phone into a Bluetooth microphone.
And a construction workers' radio like this https://amzn.eu/d/hZ8EuTH
or one of these typical jbl boomboxes.
Do you know, how the latency is for that typically? Any noticeable delay would create problems with the normally transmitted voice.
Just tried a few out and yes, the latency is very noticeable. I wouldn’t be able to sing with it.
Thanks for trying it out. Thought, that this might be a problem
I don't know. But some phones and most of these boomboxes can also work with a cable.
Before Soundboks went industrial they made portable speakers for festival goers by hooking a speaker up to car batteries and putting it in a nice box. I imagine you can get a nice setup following their footsteps. Unfortunately Soundboks is more than twice your budget so I can't recommend them on that alone, but a cheap second-hand speaker (or some drivers and an empty box so you can fit batteries inside too), a car battery, and a cheap microphone should be doable below €200-€300.