Zoom H2 Digital Field Recorder
I just bought my first Field Recorder. I am not sure what this forum thinks about stand alone recorders with built in mics, but I bet it would be something like, "those things are crap". Well in the past I would have agreed with you totally, but since listening to the recordings of what I just bought, I would have to say I am pretty impressed.
I bought the Zoom H2 and got it delivered this week. This is the recorder listed at $199 and it has 4 built in microphones. It records onto SD or HCSD cards. It records in up to 24/96 and down to 64bps MP3's. With this recorder you can record 4 tracks of surround sound at one time at 16/44.1 and it sounds pretty damn good.
So far I have used it to record a few jam practices and the thing is GREAT for that. The back microphones are aligned at 120 degrees and the fronts at 90 degrees. I placed the recorder front first, or with the 90 degree mics towards the kit and the 120 degrees towards the back of the room with the bass amp and the guitar amp spread out a little bit further. The vocals came from the back center through a PA system, now this thing does a damn good job of recording. It could take TONS of SPL before digital clipping occurred. I found this very pleasing.
It comes with a couple cool little accessories also. A nice little stand if you want it to sit upon a desk or something, a pair a decent quality ear buds, a USB cable for hooking up to the computer. My favorite part of the thing is it's ability to record directly to MP3 for those jams sessions you want to email to someone, or jam sessions you want to immediately give to the rest of the band to take home that are 3 hours long. Makes for easy translation. I used to record with a small stereo Sony Microphone onto my MD player and it was a pain in the ass because I could only get 70 minutes at a time, so during normal jam sessions I had to switch out the MD at least once and then trying to give it to the band members as they were leaving was impossible. They had to wait until the next time we jammed because I had to record them in REAL time back into the computer and onto to CD, or actually TWO CD's. It was a giant pain in the ass.
This recorder is very handy for just about anything were a simple recorder and microphone are needed. I am going to upload some recordings of myself playing the acoustic guitar sometime soon to give you an idea of how good the internal microphones actually work.
PROS - Very small size. It fits right in the palm of you hand. It records using the internal mics or you can plug in another stereo mic or line in from an outboard source. I am going to use it to record a band from the mixing board next. All I need is a simple RCA out or line out from the board and I can go into the Zoom and record at CD quality, or better if I want more headroom. 24/96 bit recording if needed. MP3's recording directly without having to convert after recording a .wav file. On the 2GB card I have in there now I get 23 hours of recording time at 224bps MP3 and that's awesome. It's half the price of anything else in it's quality level. I borrowed an Olympus from a friend, that's was spurred me on to buy this, and it was a $400 version, not sure of the model, but I don't think it really sounded any better than this one does. However the battery life is MUCH MUCH better, 25 hours or so...read further below.
CONS - Battery life it listed as 4-5 hours, which to me was pretty pathetic, but I have yet to get that much out of them. More like 3-4 hours, which is just barely enough to record a jam session. However for that use I can just plug it in. Another bad thing is that it's all plastic and feels kind of cheap. It's not something you can toss around or really let get too beat up. The one that I borrowed was aluminum cased and felt more like you could defend your house with it. I would say for normal use, the H4 is just fine. If you are going to take your recorder to EVERY concert you go to or use it constantly someplace where you can't plug it in, then go for the more expensive Olympus or Tascam recorder.
That's it for now, I will post some of the recordings from this recorder in the future. It's a great simple recorder on the cheap. If they increased the battery life on this thing, it would walk away with A LOT of awards. It seems like all the more expensive ones have MUCH better battery life. Some almost ten times as much. For no moving parts, you would think the batteries would last for a while.
Michael
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MacBookPro 2.2ghz, 4GB Ram
Garageband 08 and or sometimes Logic Pro 8
2 MOTU 896 interfaces (16 track digital simultaneously)
16x24 purpose built garage studio
Kelsey 16 channel mixer (hardly used now)
M-Audio BX5a Deluxe Studio Monitors
Last edited by Hippofish; 11-09-2008 at 06:42 PM.
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