Digital recorders
Denny Moore
moore at amazon.com.br
Wed Jun 1 17:58:49 UTC 2011
Well, in the Amazon region of Brazil the Zoom H4n has held up well--
no problems as yet. It does have a 'stamina' setting to conserve
batteries but we haven't used it. Its appeal, for the price, is the
quality of the built-in stereo mike and the fact that it has XLR
inputs and phantom power for professional microphones. We use is
with a headworn Shure WH20-XLR microphone (recommended by a
phonetician) when it is necessary to exclude ambient noise and record
one person. The signal on that microphone is a bit weak but it
reduces noise very efficiently and the track can be normalized (on
the Zoom H4n or via sound editing program) without having much
amplified noise.
-Denny Moore, Museu Goeldi
At 02:00 PM 6/1/2011, plichtab at msu.edu wrote:
>Hello,
>
>Regarding the recent question about inexpensive digital recorders, I
>believe that the Zoom H4n and Sony PCM-M10 are the minumum that
>qualifies for a quality field device. Of course, there are cheaper
>recorders that can get the job done. Of the two, I would recommend
>the Sony PCM-M10 due to its far superior battery life and a really
>good microphone pre-amplifier. However, it does not have XLR inputs
>onboard, so if you must use XLR inputs, you'll have to use the H4n.
>I have tested both recorders thoroughly, with a variety of
>microphones. Here are my reviews, if you're interested:
>
>http://bartus.org/akustyk/H4N
>
>http://bartus.org/akustyk/PCMM10
>
>Hope it helps. Please, feel free to email me if you have any further
>questions regarding recorders or microphones.
>Best,
>Bartek Plichta
>http://bartus.org
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