Taperssection.com
Gear / Technical Help => Recording Gear => Topic started by: Frosty on January 22, 2006, 03:02:40 PM
-
So sad. I've had a Microtrack for a couple of weeks ($299/Guitar Center). Upgraded firmware. I did a few tests with a 64Mb card and all seemed well. Now I'm using a Sandisck Ultra II 1Gb disk. During recording using 1/8" T-mic, the unit hangs. I have to reboot - losing whatever I recorded. So sad. Could it be he medai I'm using? Anyone seen anything like this and can offer advice?
For my purposes, the size and audio quality is excellent. A hang like this, however, makes the unit unusable.
TIA for replies.
-
I would try different media since it worked fine with the included 64MB card. What bit and sample rates are you using? Did you try the same rates with both cards? Good luck, and feel free to post the results.
-
I've been experiencing a weird bug lately where it hangs during playback, but I've never experienced a problem with hanging during recording. I would definitely take Frosty's advice and try the exact same settings that are causing the problem with Sandisk on the 64MB card (unless the problem only occurs after recording for a certain amount of time that is beyond the capacity of the 64MB card). That will at least allow you to determine whether the problem is with the card or the MT.
Craig
-
Ok, with the Sandisk Ultra II 1Gb card, I tried three times. All tests done with 1/8 T-mic recording 192 bit MP3 at 44.1 Results:
1. Hang 3.33
2. Hang 3.18
3. Kept going, stopped it after 15 minutes
4. Hang 6.21
Kokad 64mb (came with) worked OK.
Sandisk 128mb disc - no hangs during recording. Recorded several multi-minute files. HOWEVER, when I tried to copy the files from the MT, on WinXP, the directory was scrambled! (see attachment).
Very frustrating!
-
Personally I wouldn't use a Sandisk card if you gave me one for free...too much history of problems and poor performance. Your tests seem to make it pretty clear that the card is the problem. Get your money back on the Ultra II if possible (or sell it on eBay) and pick up a different brand (Kingston works well with the MT, as does Transcend).
The MT definitely seems to be picky with the cards it likes...I've had problems with both Ridata CF and Hitachi Microdrives (although others have used Hitachis with no problems). Right now I'm using a Transcend 120x (more like 60x in reality) 4GB with no problems.
Craig
-
I've had no problems with the cheap ($60) 1GB PNY or the 4GB Hitachi microdrive either. What settings are you using, btw?
-
What firmware?
Did you contact M-Audio?
-
Thanks all for the replies.
Settings noted above, latest f/w.
I did call M-Audio. The suggestion was to 1) hold DEL and cycle power. 2)hold MENU and cycle power. It got me off the phone but, unfortunately, didn't fix the problem. :(
-
Hey frosty.
I had one hang myself, while recording on a Kingston Elite Pro 1 GB. I was very upset, did all sorts of tests, and couldn't duplicate the problem except when the unit runs to the very end of the available space. In that case, it would happen every single time. Had the MT switched for another one, same problem (and two others on this forum have confirmed being able to duplicate the problem).
I was wondering if the problem you had had the same symptoms as the one I described in the following threads.
http://taperssection.com/index.php?topic=57300.0
http://taperssection.com/index.php?topic=57394.0
Please let me know. I am very interested if this hanging you experienced while recording is due to a general media error with your card, or a firmware bug. The reason I ask is that I can live with my problem (corruption when you let the MT record to the end of the media, but it's just fine if you stop the recording with ten seconds or so to spare) -- but since it did happen to me once while in the middle of a recording with half an hour left, I am very worried it could happen again.
If your problem had the same symptoms, then I'll be doubly worried.
-
raddygast - the hang I see is a bit different. Newly formatted card with f/w 1.2.3. Random hangs at different times - relatively short recordings sometimes. No files on card at all (zero bytes or otherwise).
-
A buddy of mine has had his stop recording intermittently. It doesn't really hang it just shuts off. His locked up during the third set after succesfully recording 2 - one hour sets right before it. It might be PEBKAC but it seems like it is the MT.
We bought our MT's at the same time and we both have Kingston Elite Pro 2GB CF cards. Both are upgraded to firmware version 1.2.3. Both recording 16/44.1k WAV. But mine has not had issues locking up. The only difference is that he has been recording via the 1/8" input and I have using the SP/DIF in.
-
Ok, so the Microtrack appears to work as advertised with the included 64Mb Kodak CF card. As and experiment, I bought a 256Mb Kodak card this morning and started a new test. MP3 192bits, 1/8" mic input. No hang, no hang, no hang after a few tries. Recorded for several minutes before I stopped. Then tried a few WAV files. Still good. Now, turn the unit off, then power back on. D'oh!
I get a "reading media" message on the LCD and that's the end. Hang.
Somethings about this unit (hardware, firmware) just is not ready to serve as a reliable portable recorder I think!
-
How fast is the 256MB Kodak card and how fast is the Sandisk card you mentioned in post #1?
As others have said, the MT is picky about which cards it uses. Not that it means a whole lot, but I don't see a 256mb Kodak on the list of "Tested and Approved CF cards for the Microtrack"
http://www.m-audio.com/products/en_us/MicroTrack2496-focus.html
Also, if the 64mb Kodak works, but the 256 does not, nor does the Sandisk you tried, it is probably less likely that the device is to blame.
Finally, have you tried recording using anything other than the 1/8 input? I'm not sure if this would matter, but it may be worth a shot.
-
How fast is the 256MB Kodak card and how fast is the Sandisk card you mentioned in post #1?
Doesn't say on the card - how do I tell?
Finally, have you tried recording using anything other than the 1/8 input? I'm not sure if this would matter, but it may be worth a shot.
Right. I haven't tried other input alternatives as it is the 1/8" input I would like to use for my purposes.
I called M-Audio tech support, they did not have an explanation and shot a guess/suggestion to me: format the card with Windows and try again. We'll see...
-
Update: Starting again with the Sandisk Ultra II 1Gb card, I reformatted through Windows, selecting FAT32 file system. Recorded 8 files of varying length, some 192bit MP3, some WAV. No hangs encountered.
I almost put an exclamation point after that last sentence, but I'd prefer to be cautious, and mildly skeptical about success here. The FAT32 reformat suggestion seems to have been delivered as a guess, not a definitive solution to an understood problem.
-
Update: Starting again with the Sandisk Ultra II 1Gb card, I reformatted through Windows, selecting FAT32 file system. Recorded 8 files of varying length, some 192bit MP3, some WAV. No hangs encountered.
I almost put an exclamation point after that last sentence, but I'd prefer to be cautious, and mildly skeptical about success here. The FAT32 reformat suggestion seems to have been delivered as a guess, not a definitive solution to an understood problem.
How did windows format the FAT32 card? (clustersize?)
How would the MT format a card like this? What is the optimal clustersize? (bigger is better I read but does that work for the Microtrack?)
-
- Insert CF card in Microtrack
- Connect Microtrack to PC via USB
- Wait for logical device to show up (it's E: on my PC)
- Right click on drive E:, select format and FAT32
M-Audio tech told me that only CF cards larger than 512Mb can be FAT32. Presumably smaller cards can be FAT file system, but I have not confirmed that.
I don't know what kind of filesystem the Microtrack will format to. I do believe that I tried to read a Microtrack-formatted 128Mb CF card with the card reader in my PC and it was not recognized. My guess is the Microtrack uses natively uses something other that FAT, FAT32, or NTFS which would be familiar to my WinXP system.
-
I don't think the MT actually formats the card...I think it just clears all the data on it.
Craig
-
I don't think the MT actually formats the card...I think it just clears all the data on it.
Can anybody confirm this?
What would be the best clustersize for FAT32 formatted cards for the MT?
-
I don't think the MT actually formats the card...I think it just clears all the data on it.
Craig
I guess it depends on how you define 'format'. To me the MT does format the card. It wipes the directory and sets the file system up as either fat (for cards below 1GB (so effectively cards 512MB and below) and Fat32 for cards 1GB and above. If you format a 1GB card as Fat under Windows, then put it in the MT and reformat it there, it will change the format back to Fat 32. And this formatting is a standard format that should always be readable under Windows so I'm not sure what happend to the poster who said they could not read the card in a card reader. My Lexar USB reader reads all the cards that my MT formats. Not sure about the cluster size question. I guess the MT uses what it thinks is optimal or what ever the defualt is so I guess just in case the setting has been tweaked in the MT firmware I would format in the MT for best performance.
J.T.
-
Update - still no hangs on the Ultra II 1Gb following the WinXP FAT32 format. Is it too soon to declare victory? ;)
-
Update - still no hangs on the Ultra II 1Gb following the WinXP FAT32 format. Is it too soon to declare victory? ;)
Maybe your compact flash needed to be "burned-in" for it to work correctly ;)
-
Hmm. Well, this is encouraging -- when my unit froze (well, really, it just stopped recording... then when I pressed record again, it said "writing file...." and hung on that screen, resulting in my original recording being a 0 byte file) a long while back, it was fw 1.2.0, and I had not formatted the CF card under XP.
I did follow their suggestion to reformat under XP, and since then (with fw 1.2.3), the behaviour is only encountered when you let the recording run to the end of the media. But that seems to be an unrelated problem probably having to do with incorrect space-remaining calculations.
Formatting under XP seems to be a good idea. The main question, though, is this: if you format under XP, then you later use Format on the MT itself, will that still be ok?
The XP formatting is to give it a "backup FAT".... since the MT doesn't appear to do a full format (it does a "quick format" I think) maybe it's fine to do successive formats in the unit itself. I.e. you're on the road and need to clear a CF card before recording.
Anyone know something about this?