[RNLD] H6
Giordana Featherstone
giordana at xtra.co.nz
Fri Aug 5 02:07:33 UTC 2016
Dear all,
Note that the H4n has been discontinued.
Best,
Giordana
> On 5/08/2016, at 1:59 PM, Brenda Boerger <brenda_boerger at sil.org> wrote:
>
> Mark, I asked a friend and here’s his answer. We’re both in the US.
>
> ***
> Yes, the swappable mics are gimmicky.
>
> Still I would definitely tell the ethnomusicologist and the culture documenter to give this serious thought. The XLR connection is far and away better than the standard 3.5 mm jack, and the possibility of 6 inputs on such a portable device could be a real help for their field research. And though I have not yet touched an H6, its advertised 20+ hours of battery life is much better than the 6 hours I get with an H4n or H5, even when averaged across the 4 batteries it requires.
>
> And if the $399 is more than our language documenter can afford, I'd recommend they give the H5 a good long look. It's mic pre-amps are significantly quieter than the H4n, the dials yield no handling noise compared to the H4n's rocker-switch, and it also boasts a richer feature set that I won't go in to here, but I judge the package as arguably worth the extra expense.
>
> I might even recommend the H2n over the H4n, because of quieter mic pre-amps and 13+ hours recording time from my Eneloop AA rechargeable batteries. The significant down-side is the lack of any XLR ports, which could be a deal-breaker depending on the purposes of the recordist.
>
> But if the frugal field researcher still can't afford those, the H4n is a solid, reliable piece of equipment. You can even find gently used ones on e-bay for under $140.
>
> ~Brenda
>
> From: Amanda Rose Hamilton [mailto:amanda.hamilton2 at uq.net.au]
> Sent: Thursday, August 04, 2016 7:57 PM
> To: Mark W. Post; RNLD list
> Subject: RE: [RNLD] H6
>
> Dear Mark et al,
>
> Hello! I have just returned from three months in the field in the Northern Territory (Australia) and used a Zoom H6 as my sole recorder. I thought it did really well, and I am very happy with it (though I have never used the H4N so I can’t make a direct comparison).
>
> First, I was really satisfied with the sound quality that’s achievable from two top-mounted mics that come with the recorder. In general, when recording with more than one speaker, I used the omni mic, which I thought had excellent pickup. In a few instances, with just two speakers, I used the XY mic, which really is quite directional—so much so that you really do have to have your speakers sitting at either 90 or 120 degree angles to each other (those are the two directional settings for the XY mic, and switching back and forth between the two is very easy, as you just twist the mics themselves). In other words, I found the XY pretty effective at reducing background noise while still remaining easier to set up, and less cumbersome, than additional lapel or head-mounted mics.
>
> I also found the set-up quite convenient. To switch from one input to another, you just push the button corresponding to that input. (I never came anywhere close to using all the inputs at once, though, so I can see how that feature might strike some as unnecessary.) Adjusting the recording levels is also very straightforward, as there is a separate dial corresponding to each input. The colour screen makes level checks at a glance easy to do. I recorded for probably an average of 2-3 hours per day and changed the batteries maybe about once every eight or nine days, to the best of my recollection.
>
> One big advantage of the easy set-up and level-checking ability, as I see it, is that it means it’s quite easy for language consultants who haven’t used recorders before to learn how to operate the machine. I taught a number of people how to use it, and they all felt comfortable with it pretty quickly.
>
> The only disadvantage of the H6 that I could foresee would be if you were moving around a lot while recording, or trying to carry the recorder in some kind of bag while recording (with radio mics, obviously)—the dials controlling the levels might get moved inadvertently. This was never a problem for me, though.
>
> Anyway, from my experience I think the H6 works really well and is very convenient to use. I hope that helps with your student’s considerations!
>
> All the best,
> Amanda
>
> PhD candidate
> Linguistics | School of Languages and Cultures
> 3rd floor, Gordon Greenwood Building
> University of Queensland
> St. Lucia 4072 AUSTRALIA
>
>
>
> From: Mark W. Post [mailto:markwpost at gmail.com]
> Sent: Monday, August 01, 2016 4:24 PM
> To: RNLD list <r-n-l-d at unimelb.edu.au>
> Subject: [RNLD] H6
>
> Dear Listmembers,
>
> Has anyone field-tested the Zoom H6 yet? One of my students is interested in taking it out, but I personally can't see that it adds any features that langdoc people would be interested in, and might have a few undesirables. Specifically, although the swapping-around of different capsules is certainly cool, and while the internal mics for Zoom recorders are certainly *pretty* good, they're nowhere near as good as good-quality 3rd party mics are, so this seems a little gimmicky to me - am I wrong? Also, I'm concerned that the colour LCD display on the H6 might eat up batteries faster than the H4n display did. And I can't think of any reason we'd want sooooo many independent XLR inputs, unless there's a really complicated mic setup (like a ritual performance, in which you want both a headset on the principal speaker and some other sort of mics on a lot of other people, and you actually have the money for all of the mics and the time and inclination to actually do some signal mixing afterwards). So it seems to me to be a pretty specific tool which most people recording monologues and 2-3 person interactions can probably do without, or at least won't offer any advantages over the cheaper H4n. Any thoughts?
>
> Thanks in advance,
>
> Mark
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