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the DPA D:VICE is so small it fits into my coin compartment of my wallet - nobody will ever check that. super easy so smuggle in. also you do not need to hide your phone, it raises no suspicion when looking at it and the phones battery lasts for hours for recording 24 bit.here you will have an extra device with alcaline batteries (that can be connected remotely to - your phone).unless the recording quality isnt muuuuch better than the DPA D:VICE i don't think this is much of a progress for stealth taping?
Competition: - https://lectrosonics.com/spdr-stereo-personal-digital-recorder.html - Tentacle: not yet
You can also use the new version of the Sonosax sx-m2d2 "electret".
Does anyone know what the "locking" 3.5mm stereo mic / stereo line input means?Also, I don't know what 24 or 32 bit "float" means, although I imagine it's discussed somewhere on this board - any brief explanation or link would be appreciated.
Quote from: robgronotte on June 07, 2023, 05:22:04 PMDoes anyone know what the "locking" 3.5mm stereo mic / stereo line input means?Also, I don't know what 24 or 32 bit "float" means, although I imagine it's discussed somewhere on this board - any brief explanation or link would be appreciated.it means the jack is threaded so you can screw down on it if you have that locking nut24 bit v 32 bit float are different bit depths in recording. 32bit float is newer and can give you more room. thats a quick and dirty. there is a dedicated thread for it if i recall
So you think any microphone with an 1/8" male plug could be locked in so it wouldn't accidentally come out when in use? If so, that would be a very good feature, but I've never heard of such a thing.
"I know what 24 and 32 bit mean, just had never heard of this "float" until very recently and don't know what that really means."It means you never have to set gain levels again. "To put it in perspective, 16-bit audio is capable of recording sound with a dynamic range of up to 96.3 decibels. 24-bit audio recordings can capture a dynamic range of up to 144.5 dB. Meanwhile, 32-bit float audio can capture the absolutely ludicrous range of up to 1,528 dB. That’s not only massively beyond the scope of 24-bit audio, but it’s beyond the scale of what even counts as a sound on Earth." https://www.wired.com/story/32-bit-float-audio-explained/
Quote from: unidentified on June 07, 2023, 10:07:33 PM"I know what 24 and 32 bit mean, just had never heard of this "float" until very recently and don't know what that really means."It means you never have to set gain levels again. "To put it in perspective, 16-bit audio is capable of recording sound with a dynamic range of up to 96.3 decibels. 24-bit audio recordings can capture a dynamic range of up to 144.5 dB. Meanwhile, 32-bit float audio can capture the absolutely ludicrous range of up to 1,528 dB. That’s not only massively beyond the scope of 24-bit audio, but it’s beyond the scale of what even counts as a sound on Earth." https://www.wired.com/story/32-bit-float-audio-explained/32-bit float is indeed a useful improvement but not the massive savior it is made out to be. 1528 dB of digital resolution is really not "massively beyond the scope of 24-bit audio" which has 144dB of resolution, as there does not exist an analog source with more than about 130dB of dynamic range, in theory. In reality, any live concert recording, even a SBD, has a dynamic range of around 100 dB at best, so the advantages over the common 24-bit interfaces, with levels set conservatively, are limited. Audience recordings are more like 70 dB dynamic range with the ambient crowd noise