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Gear / Technical Help => Recording Gear => Topic started by: Napo on October 06, 2012, 04:27:49 AM
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.. that I do not understand: the demand should be there. Or is it a domain for Tascam and SoundDevices?
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.. that I do not understand: the demand should be there. Or is it a domain for Tascam and SoundDevices?
Sony TCD-10? But it's a DAT ;D http://www.datrecorders.co.uk/tcdd10.php http://www.thevintageknob.org/SONY/sonyvault/TCDD10PROII/TCDD10PROII.html
Anyways.. back to this century...
Beats me.. Sony sells that XLR-to-minijack adapter box with PCM-D50 for 500 USD$ (!!) .. Think they want to sell cameras more as recording device with their crappy 16bit audio with after-thought audio chain including crappy audio inputs (even though these are XLR .. the pres are horrible) [I've owned & operated Sony's XDCAMs]
Current portable recorder brands w/ other than pure minijack inputs: Aaton (Cantar), Sonosax (SX-R2, SX62R, Mini R82*), AETA, Zaxcom (Deva,Fusion,Nomad,MAXX), Nagra, SD (7xx/t, 552, 664), Fostex (FR+PD), Marantz, Edirol/Roland (R4-PRO,R44,R88), Zoom (H4N**), Tascam .. by no means should not mix apples and oranges but just listing em all..
* not XLR but mini 7pin
** would not rate the XLR for zoom as proper input as it doesn't take line
... and nothing beats swiss made! 8)
Did I miss any current brands? :o Wonder if Korg is continuing MR-1000 with next version.. 1bit is a gimmic but wonder if was making them $$$ vs MR-2 etc.
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WOW an update of the Sony TCD-10 would be slick!
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I started this post because I want to have a all-in-one recording options and none of the ones you listed seems to me of recent built. I ma talking about high-end like SD 722, which is a great machine but 5 and more years old.
Let's see who make a move first. Nagra did but that is REALLY TOO high-end.
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I started this post because I want to have a all-in-one recording options and none of the ones you listed seems to me of recent built. I ma talking about high-end like SD 722, which is a great machine but 5 and more years old.
Let's see who make a move first. Nagra did but that is REALLY TOO high-end.
?? there are plenty of those ones that are recent built... and they do sell them still and they are fine pieces of machines yet still and beats the plastic competition in every sense..
and for example SD 664 on the list was released just couple of weeks back.. and Cantar, zaxcoms nomad & maxx are not that old either.. we are living pretty interesting times regarding pro recorders! I mean .. mixer-recorders! :)
Cheers
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YEP, you are right Hoccusfoccus;
I meant two-channel portable recorders (of course from my own perspective/need).
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Perhaps the phantom power market is smaller than the plugin power market and they haven't even realized the full potential of PIP!
I mean: give us 5V or 9V or so.
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Part of the reason might be that there's already established competition- I think their field recorders are aimed more at reporters/broadcasters and musicians. If you want a professional level 2ch box you've already got the well proven Sound Devices machines and the Nagra SD (which is around the same price as a 722).
You can use a Denecke or Canford P48 adaptor with the PCM-D-50 and it sounds pretty good, although your input is on a minijack, which isn't too secure
Sony released a mixer a few years back, but I'm not aware of anyone who's used one (it was expensive and didn't offer much in terms of routing): http://www.sony.co.uk/pro/product/mixers/dmx-p01/overview#overview
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I started this post because I want to have a all-in-one recording options and none of the ones you listed seems to me of recent built. I ma talking about high-end like SD 722, which is a great machine but 5 and more years old.
Let's see who make a move first. Nagra did but that is REALLY TOO high-end.
As another poster has mentioned, the D50 and XLR1 (http://pro.sony.com/bbsc/ssr/product-XLR1/) are essentially an updated version of the D10. Perhaps the reason why Sony has not updated their product offerings is that they really got everything right the first time with the D50 and there is no need to release a successor. If you look at subsequent offerings by companies like Sound Devices, and Tascam, the difference is in form factor and number of channels offered, not in quality of internal D/A for example. If all you are seeking is two channel recording, the D50 and XLR1 combination is as good as any.
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My understanding is that e.g. the SD788 has a different internal A/D than the lower series.
I am afraid that if I buy a 722 or an equivalent machine now, I may end up with old A/D in one year time. Am I wrong on this?
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My understanding is that e.g. the SD788 has a different internal A/D than the lower series.
I am afraid that if I buy a 722 or an equivalent machine now, I may end up with old A/D in one year time. Am I wrong on this?
In my view, the next big jump in A/D converters will be when 32 bit recording becomes the new standard. I don't know what sonic advantage 32 bit has over 24 bit recording, as I have never heard a 32 bit recording. I would not expect significant advances in 24 bit converters in the future, however. I also have no idea when 32 bit recording will be all that popular, as it would take additional storage space at all levels of the chain to make it practical for its wide usage.
In the past, getting a good 16 bit A/D was important because the technology was still fairly new and better 16 bit A/Ds came out with some regularity. With 24 bit A/D converters, there is a sense, at least in my view, that the technology has matured and the differences between these converters are not as pronounced as with the 16 bit ones. Going from the stock A/D in the Sony D8 to an outboard Apogee unit was a huge jump in quality. The jump isn't as large when going from a D50 to a Sound Devices unit, for example, especially when factoring in cost.
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Crystal clear, jlykos. Thank you.
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If all you are seeking is two channel recording, the D50 and XLR1 combination is as good as any.
I've never used a XLR1, but it seems extremely expensive for what it offers (around $450 for just phantom power and no amplification).
Is there any reason why a D50 and Tinybox combo wouldn't be better? I know it'd be a lot cheaper.
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My understanding is that e.g. the SD788 has a different internal A/D than the lower series.
I am afraid that if I buy a 722 or an equivalent machine now, I may end up with old A/D in one year time. Am I wrong on this?
nope, the ADC in the 722 is the same as in the 788. it is the preamp control that changed, they went from a manual to a digital control.
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nope, the ADC in the 722 is the same as in the 788. it is the preamp control that changed, they went from a manual to a digital control.
I thought it was the entire pre amp stage that was improved over the older 7xx units not just the gain control.
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interesting discussion, indeed (especially for a newbie like me)
fmaderjr, a bit off-topic but how do you rate your PMD661 Ambient mod? It is all in one, two-inputs, picking up instrumental jazz well I suppose - just what I need. And I would save a few bucks over the 702.
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nope, the ADC in the 722 is the same as in the 788. it is the preamp control that changed, they went from a manual to a digital control.
I thought it was the entire pre amp stage that was improved over the older 7xx units not just the gain control.
thats a question for SD then as I thought it was just pot controls (which in theory would affect the sound, but whether that's audible is a different question).
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In my view, the next big jump in A/D converters will be when 32 bit recording becomes the new standard. I don't know what sonic advantage 32 bit has over 24 bit recording, as I have never heard a 32 bit recording. I would not expect significant advances in 24 bit converters in the future, however. I also have no idea when 32 bit recording will be all that popular, as it would take additional storage space at all levels of the chain to make it practical for its wide usage.
In the past, getting a good 16 bit A/D was important because the technology was still fairly new and better 16 bit A/Ds came out with some regularity. With 24 bit A/D converters, there is a sense, at least in my view, that the technology has matured and the differences between these converters are not as pronounced as with the 16 bit ones. Going from the stock A/D in the Sony D8 to an outboard Apogee unit was a huge jump in quality. The jump isn't as large when going from a D50 to a Sound Devices unit, for example, especially when factoring in cost.
I doubt there'd be any audible difference between a 24bit and 32bit recording, it'll just be a marketing thing- only the highest end converters get analogue s/n figures over 20bit (120dB). 24bit will cover 144dB s/n (that's close to a jet engine loud, to nothing) and 16bit is 96dB. If you're getting 16bits worth you're doing well.