J
joeman
New member
If anyone can help with any of my questions, I'd appreciate it!
I am researching the best way to create a high-quality-as-possible recording of telephone conversations. These phone conversations will be part of a professionally done training DVD.
I have a JK Audio “Inline Patch” telephone audio interface box that will output the conversation (does JK Audio produce quality equipment? Who is the best in the biz?) (will this do a pro recording for me?). JK Audio Tech Support tells me I should upgrade to their “Broadcast Host” device for a higher quality recording (do you agree?). Tech Support also tells me that using the “Broadcast Host” requires some additional equipment (mike and headphones for the person making the call, and an “Imic” (USB audio interface) between the “Broadcast Host” output and the recorder input, to maintain the nice stereo separation.
And what is the best way to record this? I’d like to stay as portable as possible. I know I can buy a digital recording device (any recommendations that fit my application well?) to record to, or record to a laptop. If I record to a laptop, is the only laptop requirement that it has a sound card, or do I need some special audio recording software such as Audacity, also?
I understand the best final format for this sound track should be a WAV or MP3 file. Should I really end up with a WAV file, or will an MP3 file give me a high quality output? I know a WAV file is much larger than an MP3; is there any problem – size-wise – creating a WAV file that may go on for an hour or more?
Thanks.
I am researching the best way to create a high-quality-as-possible recording of telephone conversations. These phone conversations will be part of a professionally done training DVD.
I have a JK Audio “Inline Patch” telephone audio interface box that will output the conversation (does JK Audio produce quality equipment? Who is the best in the biz?) (will this do a pro recording for me?). JK Audio Tech Support tells me I should upgrade to their “Broadcast Host” device for a higher quality recording (do you agree?). Tech Support also tells me that using the “Broadcast Host” requires some additional equipment (mike and headphones for the person making the call, and an “Imic” (USB audio interface) between the “Broadcast Host” output and the recorder input, to maintain the nice stereo separation.
And what is the best way to record this? I’d like to stay as portable as possible. I know I can buy a digital recording device (any recommendations that fit my application well?) to record to, or record to a laptop. If I record to a laptop, is the only laptop requirement that it has a sound card, or do I need some special audio recording software such as Audacity, also?
I understand the best final format for this sound track should be a WAV or MP3 file. Should I really end up with a WAV file, or will an MP3 file give me a high quality output? I know a WAV file is much larger than an MP3; is there any problem – size-wise – creating a WAV file that may go on for an hour or more?
Thanks.