Pressing Edit brings up four pages of editable settings, 20 in all,
which can be navigated by the up/down/left/right buttons that surround
the Enter button. When the desired settings are edited, pressing the
soft key that is now named EXIT will bring up a dialog asking whether to
store this new configuration. Use the left and right keys to highlight
YES, press enter, and the new settings are stored in that preset. It
seems like one ought to be able to just start recording at this point,
but a preset still needs to be loaded, so again, choose a preset, press
enter, then enter again to select it.
This sounds like too many menu pages and button clicks, and it can
get a little frustrating to have to navigate all those levels just to
change an input setting, or file-type, but in practice, the most common
recording setups can be stored in the three presets, and accessing those
is relatively quick: MENU>>ENTER>>(select
preset)ENTER>>ENTER. Yes, that’s five button pushes for even the
simplest change, but if the desired preset is already loaded, recording
can start with one press of the large REC button.
That
button glows red when recording is underway, and recording does start
with one press, there’s not an intermediate Record-Pause mode as with
some recorders (which frequently leads to missed recordings.) There is a
REC PAUSE button that will pause the recording, and the red record
indicator will blink to indicate that status, but it’s highly
recommended to avoid using the pause button. If one only uses RECORD and
STOP, there’s less ambiguity about whether a recording is actually
underway. The left-most soft button under the main display is marked TR
during recording, and pressing it will start a new track. The middle
soft button will toggle that same button to “undo” which will prompt a
dialog to undo the most recent recording, so make sure the left button
is set to TR if you’d like to make new tracks in the midst of recording.
The right-most button will insert a mark at the time it’s pressed.
Those marks can be used later to navigate through the file when playing
the audio on the recorder, but they do not move with the soundfile when
it’s transferred to a computer for editing.
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
Marantz and it's part in Field Recording
Portable field recorders have changed dramatically in the years since the Marantz PMD 660 was released. Even back in 2005, it was not the first flash-memory based field recorder, but it was the earliest to offer professional features such as XLR mic inputs and phantom power in an affordable and compact package. What seemed like a conveniently tiny box then looks impractically large today, now that there are high-quality recorders that can fit in a shirt pocket. But there still are some advantages to a larger form: XLR mic inputs take up space, so do large displays and speakers.
The original PMD 660 had some downsides: the mic preamps were hissy and would distort with high-output mics, the mini headphone jacks were prone to shorting out, the built-in microphones were practically useless, and pins in the Compact Flash memory card slot would occasionally bend, rendering the machine inoperable. Despite those problems, it has remained a popular recorder because it was easy to use, fairly durable, and sounded good enough for many situations. Some popular marantz recorders can be found here.
Marantz has updated the PMD 660 with the PMD 661 and the good news is that it’s a major improvement all around. While it still resembles the 660, it’s slimmed down a little, and most of the major issues that plagued the original have been solved. The mic preamps are much cleaner, the headphone jack is now a much more solid-feeling quarter-inch jack, and the memory card type has been changed to SD, which doesn’t have pins that are as likely to bend.
The original PMD 660 had some downsides: the mic preamps were hissy and would distort with high-output mics, the mini headphone jacks were prone to shorting out, the built-in microphones were practically useless, and pins in the Compact Flash memory card slot would occasionally bend, rendering the machine inoperable. Despite those problems, it has remained a popular recorder because it was easy to use, fairly durable, and sounded good enough for many situations. Some popular marantz recorders can be found here.
Marantz has updated the PMD 660 with the PMD 661 and the good news is that it’s a major improvement all around. While it still resembles the 660, it’s slimmed down a little, and most of the major issues that plagued the original have been solved. The mic preamps are much cleaner, the headphone jack is now a much more solid-feeling quarter-inch jack, and the memory card type has been changed to SD, which doesn’t have pins that are as likely to bend.
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