Maybe so. Is it just me though? I could hear a wider stereo image in 24 bit.
The clarity maybe not so much. All though remember I did these recordings on
a laptop's built in audio. Not an LS-100. Most dephinitly not a Sound
Devices 700 recorder.

-----Original Message-----
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of tim
cumings
Sent: Tuesday, August 20, 2013 7:03 PM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Re: best digital recording thats blind friendly

    in my opinion 96.1 khz 24 kbps is overkill for most recording since
humans can't even hear above about 20 khz.
in
----- Original Message -----
From: "Hamit Campos" <hamitcam...@gmail.com>
To: "'PC Audio Discussion List'" <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Tuesday, August 20, 2013 6:04 PM
Subject: RE: best digital recording thats blind friendly


> Yeah, I'd go with the Olympus ones. Even the LS-7 might do since you 
> don't seem to be too demanding on sound quality. I recommend this one 
> since it does 96 KHZ 24 Bit. So does the H1 but my problem is you 
> can't pause whilst recording.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of 
> dennis
> Sent: Tuesday, August 20, 2013 4:20 PM
> To: PC audio discussion list.
> Subject: best digital recording thats blind friendly
>
> hello list. i need a decent digital recorder with decent condenser 
> mike that is easy to use and makes good recordings of live music 
> performences.any ideas?
> To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
> pc-audio-unsubscr...@pc-audio.org
>
>
> To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
> pc-audio-unsubscr...@pc-audio.org


To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
pc-audio-unsubscr...@pc-audio.org


To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
pc-audio-unsubscr...@pc-audio.org

Reply via email to