okay, i went out and got an r-09 and like it so far. i am a journalist and am going to use it to record in-field interviews. for recording, i tried using AGC but felt it tamped down everything too much, so I'm back to fiddling with the sliders. my problem is, once i'm in the field, i can't go and check my levels; what they are in the beginning is what they're going to have to be for the duration. anyone got an idea what level i might set it at for *most* conditions. we're not talking about huge sounds, but voices moving in and away, louder then softer, with maybe some typical restaurant noise at times. i'm thinking "25".
i understand the battery life is about 4 hrs with regular AAs. are there any batteries that will extend this and, if so, by about how much? also, what impacts battery life in a machine like this; ie, are there any internal variables that i might futz with to prolong the life o the battery?
thanks for the help!
Most of my customers doing field work do NOT like using rechargeables for reliability and charging issues. So using regular akalines, expect at least 4-5 hours depending on ambient temps; higher temps give longer use. There are two choices for non-rechargeable AA cells that should be considered for longer than regular alkaline run times.
One is a new formulation of alkaline cell with the word OXY in the name.
Made by both Sony and Panasonic with slightly different names.
Panasonic uses the moniker OXYRIDE EXTREME POWER and Sony calls their version 'digital3 shot' on the package, and 'OXY NICKEL PRIMARY' on the individual cells.
These cells cost about 30%-50% more than regular alkaline, and will last 30-50% LONGER than typical alkaline, so expect at least 6-8 hours running time.
The other type of AA cell is Energizer's L91 photo lithium that should give at least 9 hours recording ability, works without significant loss of running time at below zero temperatures, and is much lighter in weight than alkaline cells so packing spares is easier, but much more costly to purchase than the previous types mentioned.
In regards to field recording where levels vary quite a bit and auto level is mostly unacceptable I suggest the following to my customers doing similar work. Invest in a larger capactiy flash card, and record using 24bit/44.1K WAV file instead of MP3.
Then set manual record levels at 12-to-25 dB BELOW 0 dB VU maximum.
In so doing the recording will rarely see an overload regardless of what happens unexpectedly, and the 24 bit depth WAV format allows for NO LOSS OF AUDIO QUALITY for having very low average VU levels (this is different from 16 bit depth recording in this regard). Afterward, simply do the necessary post editing (like normalization or similar raising of average recorded levels) to bring the edited version up to normal listening VU levels, and convert to 16 bit depth WAV if desired, or encode the 24 bit directly to MP3 format. Using this technique, very low level recording with tons of headroom will always sound excellent, and unintentional overloads are virtually eliminated.
Also, there is little or NO difference in battery run times between MP3 or WAV file recording maybe because MP3 is more computer encoding process intensive, while WAV is simply more data write-to-flash intensive.
So get a good quality large capacity flash card (some draw less power to write than others), set to record manually at ~12-to-25 dB dB peak level below 0 dB maximum, and go out and get the action without concern for overloads regardless of working conditions.