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Gear / Technical Help => Recording Gear => Topic started by: audiothings on April 10, 2008, 01:49:38 AM
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is there any effective way of getting high quality audio into an ipod classic? @ 44.1/16... is there any way to interface it with, say, a church audio preamp or some such? is there a significant noise factor even if the mics are powered and amplified externally...
i have seen some cheap solutions from griffin and suchlike, but none of them seem to be built for high quality music capture.
thanks,
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this has been covered many times and the answer is always : do not use an ipod for recording, the rockbox software is extremely unstable with ipods and in fact i don't know of one recording with them, i tried this a couple years ago and it crashed the hard drive and everything i ever tried to find out basically said it did the same thing to other people trying it, just get a h320 or h120 and be done with it, those things are like a tank.
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YOu may have luck with a device like this: http://gizmodo.com/gadgets/gadgets/belkin-makes-ipod-into-recording-studio-226614.php
Or this:
http://www.sweetwater.com/store/detail/MultiPort
But for that money, you can just buy another recorder that already does what you want and is much smaller.
Terry
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This looks pretty cool though...
http://gizmodo.com/341267/belkin-podcast-studio-ipods-get-xlr
Terry
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this has been covered many times and the answer is always : do not use an ipod for recording, the rockbox software is extremely unstable with ipods and in fact i don't know of one recording with them, i tried this a couple years ago and it crashed the hard drive and everything i ever tried to find out basically said it did the same thing to other people trying it, just get a h320 or h120 and be done with it, those things are like a tank.
Apart from that, the ipod classic isn't even supported by rockbox :P
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The 4 channel Belkin Tune Studio is coming in June, $250. It works with the Classic and 5th generation iPod, and with the second and third generation Nano. http://www.belkin.com/tunestudio/
The Belkin Podcast Studio is supposed to be available this Summer for $100. This item doesn't appear on the Belkin web pages yet.
Both address the major problem of other iPod recording gadgets, namely that controls for preamp gain, mic sensitivity and so on are all buried in menus. It's inconvenient to record using menu selections as controls. Regardless of the tpe of iPod used, the top digitizing rate is 16/44.1.
Flintstone
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The fact remains that the iPod wasn't originally designed as a recording device so any secondary device is trying to make it do something it wasn't designed for. So the results you get may not be ideal. The irivers and other devices were made with the ability to record as a main feature. That's why they do so well at the task. For the amount of money you'd spend to get even halfway decent results with an iPod it would be best to buy a new recorder.
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Unless you get that Tune Studio, it's going to record in mono anyway.