Are you sure the PMD661 has that option (of a second recording at reduced volume)? I may be mistaken, but I don't think it does...
I wasn't sure, so I had a look at the manual again (I've read all the manuals). The mode is called D.Mono and it says:
The left channel input is recorded in both Left and Right channels. The Right channel is attenuated by 20 dB.No offense, but I'm hearing inexperience with digital recording more than I am hearing a requirement…
How did you guess that I've not done much digital recording? A lot of analogue, dating back to reel-to-reel as a boy in the late 60s; and from the 80s onwards a fair bit with my three Tascams (144, 234, 414), but I've just sold those. Fetched a good price too. About $800 for the three. Now I'm about to move properly into digital, after several years of playing around with my Edirol UA3 feeding into GarageBand. I guess you're saying that with modern low-noise inputs and capacitive microphones, and using 24-bit, there is a lot more performance than from a Tascam 4-track cassette. Maybe I'll toss the low-level, second-channel requirement. It seems so nice to have though.
I'd want to hear more about this objective [multitrack recordings into a computer] before recommending anything.
What I'm trying to avoid is ending up with lots of equipment. I want a portable, low input-noise recorder for nature and quiet-room recordings; I want to record solo multi-track songs (up to 8-tracks, one at a time mostly); and I want to record concerts such as chamber-music recitals at a small local venue. And I want a microphone or two that I can take with me - probably the NTG1 and NT55 (with omni and cardioid capsules). I'm not after the best, but I don't want equipment that is obviously inferior in some way, such as the relatively noisy DR-40. I'm a great believer in: "the limiting factor is the user, not the equipment".
So, when I go bush, or for quiet recordings, the DR-40 is crossed off.
Next comes a factor that USA citizens don't have to worry about: cost and shipping. I'm Down Under. Prices here can be twice what they are in the USA. So I buy from the USA – but USPS won't accept lithium batteries, so I either pay more for shipping via UPS, or I choose a non-lithium recorder. Out goes the DR-100.
So I'm down to the R-26 and PMD661. Virtually no difference in noise performance. One has USB recording, but no low-level second track; the other is the opposite. Which to choose?
I'm now at home, and I'm with banjo, guitar, and percussion stuff; my partner's hovering in the background with her flute and piano, and what do I do? Fire up my big iMac, connect a USB device, and away I go. But that means I'm tied to the computer room – unless I shift the iMac. And anyway, for me, sitting near a computer is not that conducive to music making. So I buy a battery-powered Tascam DP-008 and multitrack with that. But I'm not at all interested in mixing with it, so I connect it to the iMac, transfer the eight tracks, and mix in GarageBand. The song would be just perfect if it had a ninth track. I'm sitting in front of the computer, and … wouldn't it be so easy if I had a USB device that I could connect to the computer, plug in a mic, and record that extra something. But I haven't got one, so I dig up the DP-008, find the recording (hope its not erased), if it is, spend 10 minutes trying to find the backup, and even longer transferring it back to the DP-008. Do the recording, plug it into the Mac, transfer … What a bother! Where's my USB device when I need it?
So I buy an R-26 instead of a PMD661, and sacrifice a bit of noise performance and the low-level track, but save three hundred dollars. Hey, I've almost convinced myself.
To order:
1 x NTG1 + WS6 windshield
1x NT55
1 x R-26 + spare Eneloops
1 x DP-008
And then the thunder rolls while I'm making a wilderness recording. Why didn't I get the Marantz!