B
Barak
New member
My congregation is looking at getting started in digital multitrack recording. However, we want at least to start out inexpensively. We have a 40x8 house mixer, and we don't want to buy a digital workstation that big.
Here's what I think would be really great:
A rack-mount device with either 8 analog inputs or (preferably) a single optical ADAT input on the back. (I can get an A/D ADAT converter if I need one, with exactly the input options I need.) I'll hook it up to the house mixer's subgroups. It has 8 VU meters and 8 trim controls on the front panel, plus record, play, and stop buttons, and not much else. (A jog wheel might be nice.) Ideally, it would record its data to a 1- or 2GB SD card; but in any case, I need some sort of media that I can pull out after the service and take back to my home studio and mix down using my computer, for upload to a Web site and burning onto a CD.
I absolutely need:
* Eight channels of simultaneous record capability
* 16-bit / 44.1kHz operation
* Level-setting trim on individual channels (unless input is ADAT)
* Recording to removable medium
* Output in hard and soft format compatible with my home machine.
* Simple operation that can be handled by amateur volunteers (sometimes very amateur): something like, "Press RECORD just before the prelude music starts; it'll turn off on its own."
* Solid week-in, week-out reliability
I absolutely do not need, and do not want to pay for:
* 16 or 24 channels of recording
* 24-bit resolution
* 96- or 192kHz capability
* A complex mixer-like control surface
* An audio editing workstation
* A MIDI sound module or sequencer
And I'd like to pay considerably less than $1000 for this beast.
Any takers?
Thanks,
Barak
Here's what I think would be really great:
A rack-mount device with either 8 analog inputs or (preferably) a single optical ADAT input on the back. (I can get an A/D ADAT converter if I need one, with exactly the input options I need.) I'll hook it up to the house mixer's subgroups. It has 8 VU meters and 8 trim controls on the front panel, plus record, play, and stop buttons, and not much else. (A jog wheel might be nice.) Ideally, it would record its data to a 1- or 2GB SD card; but in any case, I need some sort of media that I can pull out after the service and take back to my home studio and mix down using my computer, for upload to a Web site and burning onto a CD.
I absolutely need:
* Eight channels of simultaneous record capability
* 16-bit / 44.1kHz operation
* Level-setting trim on individual channels (unless input is ADAT)
* Recording to removable medium
* Output in hard and soft format compatible with my home machine.
* Simple operation that can be handled by amateur volunteers (sometimes very amateur): something like, "Press RECORD just before the prelude music starts; it'll turn off on its own."
* Solid week-in, week-out reliability
I absolutely do not need, and do not want to pay for:
* 16 or 24 channels of recording
* 24-bit resolution
* 96- or 192kHz capability
* A complex mixer-like control surface
* An audio editing workstation
* A MIDI sound module or sequencer
And I'd like to pay considerably less than $1000 for this beast.
Any takers?
Thanks,
Barak