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Re: looking for: a cheap portable digital audio recorder
hi,
first off, thanks Ian and Art for your comments and suggestions. i
think the one Art mentions is more what i am looking for. i've seen
various models i can't recall at the moment that seemed great, but
they're usually over $500, sometimes even over $1,000. that's just
too much for what i am considering. i did see something just now that
looks pretty good:
http://www.musiciansfriend.com/product/HiFi/A/V/Equipment/Home/Audio?
sku=244762
a Sony Pro MZ-M10 Hi-MD Portable Audio Recorder. it comes with a good
stereo mic, records a gig on removable media, has high quality/
fidelity, is physically small and, being Sony, most likely well-made.
and it's only $300. still, i was really think of something under
$150, much closer to what Art mentions. i am living in Brazil and
want to have something i wouldn't be too upset about loosing or
having stolen, that i can carry around and whip out when, as often
happens, i am surprised by some great music or ambient sounds. and of
course it would be much nicer if there was a digital out, as opposed
to analog, so i could dump to computer easily for clean-up and/or
manipulation of the recordings.
i have seen Olympus and others with sub-$100 audio recorders, but
often they don't have either a digital connection or even half-way
decent sound resolution. another option is a digital camera or
cellphone, which often record pretty decent audio and have a digital
connection, but these are usually too expensive - i.e, i wouldn't
want to flash one around in many of the places i am thinking of
recording.
so thanks again for the tips and ideas! i'll let you know what i end
up with and how it works out ;)
-3nki
On Mar 28, 2006, at 7:35 AM, Ian Popperwell wrote:
> Hi,
>
> The trouble is that you don't say what "cheap" means for you -
> neither do you say which "non-cheap" models that you've seen that
> might help us.
>
> Whether cheap or expensive, I have an Edirol R-1 (about £300). It
> records to Compact Flash cards (although only comes with a tiny
> one). it has built in effects (including various "mastering"
> programmes which are multiband compressors, it also has a limiter
> which is additional to the effects. It records directly to WAV or
> various resolutions of MP3. Goes straight into USB and doesn't need
> any of it's own software. I have a few small gripes: fiddly level
> control, you can only monitor levels in record pause mode, not when
> recording, the screen is very faint. But I like mine, I've recorded
> gigs from the desk and with the built in mics, I use it for
> recording practices too and loads of other jobs.
>
> There's also a similarly priced M-Audio one and a much highr priced
> Marantz with XLRs and fantom power.
>
> I have an Iriver MP3 player which records - IHP120 - but as has
> already bee said, the built in mic is rubbish+ it picks up hard
> disk noise, also quite fiddly to work with.
>
> Hope this is of some use.
>
> Ian.
>
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "3nki" <3nki@modaldub.net>
> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com>
> Sent: Monday, March 27, 2006 8:43 PM
> Subject: looking for: a cheap portable digital audio recorder
>
>
>> hello list!
>>
>> i am looking for a cheap and portable digital audio recorder.
>> i've seen some nice ones, but they aren't cheap at all. perhaps
>> some people on the list have ideas? ;)
>>
>> important qualities:
>> - built-in mic
>> - USB or Firewire connection to computer
>>
>> desirable:
>> - built-in compression
>> - decent audio quality
>> - stereo recording
>>
>> thanks for any advice!
>>
>> -3nki
>>
>>
>
>
>
>