Solid State recorder

Nick Thieberger thien at unimelb.edu.au
Wed Jun 1 20:15:19 UTC 2011


I have also had good experience with the H4n, using all four tracks to
record four singers in a windy river bed with minimal noise. BUT I
have heard several reports now from researchers using PARADISEC
equipment and from others of it failing intermittently to recognise
the SD card. The Zoom website lists acceptable cards so I think they
are aware of the problem too. It is very frustrating to be about to
record and to have to take out the card several times until the
recorder recognises that it is there.

Nick

On 1 June 2011 22:37, Randy LaPolla <R.LaPolla at latrobe.edu.au> wrote:
> Hi Stephen,
> Many people use the Zoom H4n, but my experience recently with one was not
> the best. It chewed through batteries (even the best ones available) in a
> very short time, and I had assumed that once folder 1 was full it would
> automatically start on folder 2, but it didn’t do that; it just stopped
> without warning. The sound quality was also less than I expected. If you do
> go with it, set the recording levels manually and monitor them with
> headphones.
>
> One of my students (David Sangdong) had his break down in the field after
> only a short time.
>
> Randy
>
> ---
> Randy J. LaPolla, PhD FAHA
> Professor (Chair) of Linguistics
> La Trobe University
> VIC 3086 AUSTRALIA
> Tel.: +61 3 9479-6402 (RCLT) / 9479-2555 (Ling)
> FAX:  +61 3 9467-3053 (RCLT) / 9479-1520 (Ling)
>
> RCLT: http://www.latrobe.edu.au/rclt/
> Linguistics: http://www.latrobe.edu.au/linguistics/
> The Tibeto-Burman Domain: http://tibeto-burman.net/
> Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area: http://stedt.berkeley.edu/ltba/
>
>
> ________________________________
> From: Stephen Morey <s.morey at latrobe.edu.au>
> Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2011 22:19:15 +1000
> To: "r-n-l-d at unimelb.edu.au" <r-n-l-d at unimelb.edu.au>
> Subject: Solid State recorder
>
> Dear RNLD list,
>
>
>
> I need some advice as to what would be the best most up-to-date solid state
> recorder to buy for around $200-$300 , that would run on batteries. I want
> to buy one for use in Myanmar by someone who is right now in Bangkok and who
> needs to buy it in the next one or two days. I don't think there will be
> access to a laptop download when our colleague is in the field, so we'll
> need a machine that uses flash cards or some other kind of memory card -
> preferably something that we can buy several of without spending too much
> money.
>
>
>
> Many thanks to all
>
>
>
> Stephen Morey
>
> Research Centre for Linguistic Typology
>
> La Trobe University
>
>



More information about the Resource-network-linguistic-diversity mailing list