I'm posting this response for Dan Dugan:
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Thanks, Rob, please post this for me.
Rodeen: I have no expertise at all in the kind of tests Dan ran but do have some questions about what he did.
...snip...
how the preamp performs. Quite honestly if the headphone amp is subpar it wouldn't bother me a whole
lot.
Dan: I wouldn't be able to live with a recorder that had a headphone amp that was that noisy, either. Would you want to sit on a cliff in the desert waiting for bats to fly out of a cave listening to -- hiss? The signal-to-noise demands of nature recording are the same as for classical music recording. With the added challenges of doing it with a rig you can hike with, and in weather!
I'm in the habit of doing measurement of consumer recorders from the headphone jack because on many portables the headphone output is a better line amp for driving a string of test instruments. It may have a lower output impedance--a phones amp has to be low-Z, but an RCA line out is often padded for protection. On the Sony WM-D6C, for example, the line output starts rolling off from the capacitance of six feet of cable or more. BTW I checked to be sure the output equalizer in the MicroTrack was set flat.
I know the noise on the analyzer was input noise because it went up and down with the record gain setting. Phones amp noise would be constant.
Rodeen: The last test was to try using the MT as a bit bucket. This will be how I use mine almost exclusively.
In my "living room" testing I chained my MT off my PCM-M1 DAT which is known for its low voltage
output on its SP/DIF. My MT locked without a problem and recorded flawlessly. Ask a D8 user to do
that :-)
Dan: Happy to hear that. I only tried it with one S/PDIF source.
Rodeen: Finally, Dan's initial test was to plug a mic in a give it a listen. He commented that it sounded good
with extended low frequency response and a good signal to noise ratio. As Doug Oade frequently says,
trust your ears.
Dan-- It's even better to know -when- to trust your ears. When the analyzer looked worse than what I heard, I checked the response of the phones, which I got recently and only use for monitoring in the field. I was getting a filtered impression.
Rodeen: My first field test is Wednesday night! I can't wait to see how it performs. I'll be bit-bucketing to DAT
and NJB3 as well.
Rod
Dan: If you're recording a loud scene, it will be fine.
-Dan Dugan