I can work on your project.

Find me! Call DAP at 214.350.7678 or email rene@dallasaudiopost.com. Also check out echocollectivefx.com for custom sfx, and tonebenders.net for my podcast.

Monday, November 29

handheld recorder shootout-part 1-specs



This is the first in a series of posts that will cover a recent shootout done with three popular handheld recorders against a reference setup. This test is not in any way exhaustive, and in no way constitutes my endorsement of anything - all opinions are my own.


The portable recording device market has exploded in recent years, and everyone is looking around wonder which one to buy - so I’m here to help! The specific purpose of the shootout is to evaluate the recorders through the lens of sound designers and field recordists, and to measure them against an industry standard field recording setup. I’m testing out three recorders against a reference setup - the test includes:


  • Sony PCM D50
  • Tascam DR-100
  • Zoom H4n
  • Sound Devices 744t with Sure SM81s in XY setup (reference)


Part 1 of this review is measuring stats and features. Listening test comes in part 2.


I’ve owned the D50 almost since it came out, having purchased it to replace my plasticky H4. The DR-100 is a recent acquisition for me, but I’ve taken it out enough to be familiar with it. The H4n has been at use at the office for a while, and I’ve taken it out on several shoots. The sound devices rig speaks for itself, and is included as a pure benchmark against which to measure the other recorders.


Lets start with the bottom line:


Price (via B&H)



Sony D50

$441

Tascam DR-100

$272

Zoom H4n

$299


SD 744t/sm81

$3193 (priced 702 instead of 744t)



The D50 is nearly 1.5x the price of the other two, though the price point for each of the handhelds is peanuts compared to the big boy Sound Devices rig.

I/O



built in mics

mic in

line in

remote

Sony D50

stereo electret condenser

3.5mm stereo jack

3.5mm stereo jack

wired

Tascam DR-100

stereo electret condenser and stereo (pzm?) omni

stereo XLR

3.5mm stereo jack

optical (12 ft range)

Zoom H4n

stereo electret condenser

stereo Neutrick XLR or 1/4 inch

3.5mm stereo jack

wired

SD 744t/sm81

none

Stereo XLR


none



The D50 sorely misses XLR inputs, as the 3.5mm stereo jack lacks phantom power and is just about unusable in my experience. The DR-100 has adequate I/O, but the Zoom wins with its Neutrick combination jacks. The Sound Devices rig has 2 XLR inputs, but goes into specialty jacks quickly after that.


Battery Life



battery system

battery life

Sony D50

4 AA batterys in a sled

incredible

Tascam DR-100

Proprietary Li-Ion battery with 2 AA battery backup

passable

Zoom H4n

2 AA batteries

poor

SD 744t/sm81

Sony InfoLithium

very good



I have not run a scientific battery life test on these devices, but after a few months of usage for each the battery life ratings are what I believe to be accurate. The bottom line here is that D50 is the single most battery efficient piece of electronic equipment I own. The factory batteries lasted literally weeks of heavy use initially, and at 24 bit 96k the batteries far outlast the storage capacity, usually by an order of 3 to 6x depending on if I’m driving headphones. The H4n is the other end of the spectrum, sucking down batteries quickly and feeling a bit underpowered considering the size and brightness of the LCD screen and the ability to roll on 4 channels simultaneously. The DR-100 uses a proprietary battery that charges via USB and lasts long enough to be ok during a medium length record session. The ability to seamlessly switch to the AA backup is a plus.


Storage



Sony D50

internal 4gigs of flash memory - expandable with memory stick

Tascam DR-100

SD card

Zoom H4n

SD card

SD 744t/sm81

internal hard drive, CF cards, DVD Ram, Firewire



The built in internal storage on the D50 is a nice touch IMO, but the implementation of memory stick as the expansion media is outdated and crappy. Not only is memory stick a dead format, but the device mounts both as separate drives for recording and data transfer. With that said, 4 gigs is plenty for most hand held recording type gigs, so its not exactly a deal-breaker. SD cards on the other two devices are more standard.



Mic Mounts



Sony D50

swivel mount from wide to X/Y, protective bars on top

Tascam DR-100

both mics straight ahead with speaker in between (pseudo binarual?)

Zoom H4n

fixed XY with variable pickup patterns

SD 744t/sm81

none



The D50 wins the mic mounting and versatility contest, which is important considering how much it relies on the built ins. The protective bars are both reassuring and useful for mounting wind protection, and the wide mic setup sounds very wide compared to the XY setup. The DR-100s unorthodox setup may make for stranger stereo imaging than the others.


External Switches



transport

48v

hi pass

limiter

ext/int mics

pad

Hold

Sony D50

Y

N

Y

Y

Y

Y

Y

Tascam DR-100

Y

Y

N

Y

Y

Y

Y

Zoom H4n

Y

N

N

N

Y

N

Y

SD 744t/sm81

Y

N

N

N

N

N

N



While the DR-100 has more external switches than the D50 does, the D50 has more that are of use to a field recordist that is looking to adjust record settings quickly. The H4n relies more heavily on the menu system, and compensates by having multiple ways to navigate the menu and the largest LCD screen of the three. I give the edge here to the D50, but not by a wide margin.


Preamp dial



Sony D50

continuous side mount-protected

Tascam DR-100

continuous side mount-split

Zoom H4n

up and down arrows-splittable with latest firmware

SD 744t/sm81

continuous front mount-split and recessable


The way that a recordist interfaces with a preamp is an important part of a device, and here we have less a clear winner than we do a clear loser. The DR-100’s ability to recess channels by splitting the preamp knob is a clear advantage over the D50, but the feel of the D50’s smooth metal knob really deserves points over the plastic counterparts of the competition. The H4n’s up and down arrows are functional, but

completely inadequate when one needs to make quick preamp adjustments in the heat of recording.





Most distinctive features


Sony D50

swivel mics, battery life, metal construction, quality components

Tascam DR-100

split preamp knob, extended battery life

Zoom H4n

4 channel record mode, neutrick dual mode xlr inputs

SD 744t/sm81

build quality, meters, preamps, AD converters, I/O



So based on pure stats and functionality the decision still depends entirely on how you plan to use it. Here’s how I would break it down:


Sony PCM D50:


Excellent build quality, just the right switches built into the chassis, swivel mics and a great preamp mean that this is a perfect candidate to always have by your side as a stand alone recording system. External mics are a no-go so more specialized applications like foley and voiceover recording should go to a different device, but this device is hard to beat for spur of the moment or low profile ambiances, music, crowds and other close or medium distance stereo sound sources.


Battery life means you can plant this device in a location and roll while waiting for audio to develop minutes and hours later.


Tascam DR-100


This device is a workhorse when used in conjunction with external mics, and can make a great lightweight capture device for DSLR filming, VO recording, moving vehicle recording, etc - especially when recessing one channel for safety in critical situations. The built in mics aren’t as solid as the other devices, but are usable if in need.


Construction is plastic but solid and navigation is quicky and easy.





Zoom H4n


The 4 channel record mode makes this the only device that can record both a board feed (thorugh the line in) and the


audience response (through the built in mics) of a live show. This is a functionality that the DR-100 lacks, and I’ve had great success using the H4n in that context. The built in mics are very good on their own right, though they don’t quite reach the level of quality of the Sony (while being better than those on the DR-100).



This device has become the industry standard for DSLR video shooters, though I’d still personally recommend the DR-100 over the H4n for that specific purpose both because of the recessed channel function, battery life, and preamp quality.

This is not to say the H4n has poor preamps, because it does not. Its just that the DR-100s are that much better.


Poor battery life and capacity are the biggest issues here.



So that’s how these things do on paper. In part 2 we’ll do a listening test that focuses on the built in mics. Stay tuned!

Tuesday, November 23

boiling water = radio static


While cooking some spaghetti for dinner today I added some salt to the noodles and oil and got some pretty intense crackling going on due to the millions of tiny tiny bubbles.

I had my recorder in arms reach, so I parked it up close and recorded a few minutes. When I brought it in to catalogue I started varispeeding the sound, and realized just how much it sounds exactly like pure unmoving tv or radio static, even at very slow pitches:


That's pretty useful! Bring on the lo-fi.

Monday, November 15

a tiny antique film camera


A few weeks back I went to the camera show in Grapevine looking for both camera equipment and anything interesting sounding. While I largely passed on the stuff that I'd actually want to shoot footage with, I did find this little treasure to record - and at a bargain price of $20!

What you're looking at there is a B and H Filmo Sportster 8mm film camera. It has a manual crank, a thick metal casing, an a million little noises to record.

While I did manage to get tons of coverage while recording it today, I'd like to focus on one specific usage that I get tons of mileage out of these kinds of things for: UI and small servos.

Now this particular device doesn't have any electronic parts, but it still made tons of very clean servo sounding noises regardless - especially since I was able to drag the switch you hold down to make the film spin and get a cool scraping noise. When highpassed, and pitched around it can be pretty convincing, while remaining very natural and organic sounding.

In this sample the first half is as recorded and the second half is severely highpassed. I tend to use these types of noises with a little flange for sci fi servos and UI sounds pretty frequently.



The mp3 compression on soundcloud doesn't handle pure high end all that well, but you get the idea.

The other thing this camera had loads of was mechanical latch and click sounds. In many ways it sounded like gun foley, but I can also use this kind of thing for high tech sounding buttons and clicks with the same highpass technique.

Its a little ironic that I'm dreaming up all of these high tech sounds given the source, but in the end no one cares what the thing looked like when you recorded it.

Here's a little demo of the clicks and latches using the same superhighpass filter and with the same soundcloud limitations.



All in all it was well worth the purchase, especially when you add in future foley possibilities with weapons and other mechanical devices.

Saturday, November 13

downtime

So we've just wrapped an incredibly busy period at work marked by the elections in November. The political world keeps us very busy on its cycle, and the wave kind of creeps up on you until you just stop for a moment and marvel at how buried you are.

When you come out of a busy cycle like this you tend to uncover your eyes, look around and realize how much of your normal routine you've neglected or delayed. In my case that meant that I had a big backload of sfx that needed editing and cataloging, as well as a few personal video projects that needed editing.

With those done and some breathing room in between now and my next big busy time I'm finding myself in a period of downtime, which was refreshing for a couple of weeks but is now starting to make me antsy, so I'm starting to dream up some new sound design projects to keep me sharp and busy.

The problem of course, is that by nature I run at these things all at once and tend to not just sit down with one until I finish it. Without a client and a deadline I tend to be more scattered.

So, my upcoming projects include:

  • recording more sound-infused timelapses like this one:

  • composing an actual video edit in collaboration with my co-worker Brad Dale, who has written some incredible music based on some of the stuff that I've shot
  • doing more electrostatic recordings with my new trusty guitar pickup rig
  • doing more contact mic recording
  • continuing to scout remote locations for potential car, fire and gunshot recordings
  • doing a shootout on some portable recorders for the blog
  • blogging more in general
Now, in a few weeks we should be getting our next film, Benavides Born, into the house so that should sate my appetite for intense creative projects. But between now and then, we'll see...



Friday, November 5

Alliance Airshow recordings











So I'm keeping the promise I've made to the zero people following this zombie blog to start posting more and specifically to start posting about recording more.

I'd like to start off by sharing some recordings made on Halloween at the Alliance Air Show in Ft Worth. I went with my sister and family and took some recording gear, but I was going into the situation pretty blindly. My main goal was to get some good aircraft recordings of whatever I could, and I brought a rig that would be able to isolate the aircrafts from the noisy backgrounds while being as portable as possible.

What I didn't anticipate was the total and complete coverage of the PA announcers throughout the entire airstrip who were talking through was a series of horns scattered across the entire perimiter. The PA wasn't loud especially - it was just ubiquitous, so there were no clean spots in the entire area to record from, and the PA guys really never stopped describing the action.
Despite that, I came back with some useable stuff and ended up very happy with my first real
test of the new DR-100 I picked up a few weeks ago. I was able to move about in a dense crowd with ease because I was only carrying a micstand and the handheld recorder.