I've read through a hundred threads looking for info on which recorder to get, and am still at a bit of a loss.
My wife is a singer who wants a simple portable recorder with a built-in mic for everyday recording of her practice sessions. Quality when using the internal mic is not too important. She's been getting by with an old $10 cassette recorder until now, so a little HD spin noise or mp3 compression isn't going to faze her.
She'd also like to be able to record performances, however, and this is where
I start to demand a little more audio quality. I'm not sure that we're ready to invest in super-hi-end mics, pre-amps, outboard DACs, etc. But I would really like to be able to hook up a decent mic or two to a portable device and capture something that doesn't sound too amateurish. And I might even want to try taping a few shows, too, as long as we have the equipment.
Our priorities in rough order are:
- Internal mic
- Battery life and portability
- Built-in analog input (preferably mic level)
- Big maximum file-size
- Reasonable built-in DAC
- PCM (wav) recording capability (lower priority, but we'd like it)
I know many here are huge Nomad JB3 fans, but the lack of an internal mic pretty much kills it for us.
Flipping through various threads, it sounds like the iRiver H120/H140 (aka iHP-120/140) would probably be the best solution, especially if the Rockbox folks succeed in eliminating the 74 minute limit. And we can live with the 74 minute limit anyway, if everything else about it makes sense.
The problem is that the H140 is virtually impossible to find. I see only one for sale on eBay right now. My wife is very interested in the newer snazzier iRiver H10 (and the similar iAudio X5). But both of those appear to record only in mp3 and have only line-level analog inputs on an external cradle.
Does anybody here have any experience with the iRiver H10 or iAudio X5? Are there other devices we should be considering? We've thought about MD, but we'd also like to be able to easily transfer the files to our computers and web servers. Plus my wife really likes the idea of having a recorder that is also an mp3 player.
Again, for our purposes digital input and fancy custom settings are mostly irrelevant. We just want a simple device that records decently from an internal mic, and a little better from an external mic.
Thanks.