134 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
134 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1844
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Title: HPR1844: The Marantz PMD 660 Professional Solid State Recorder
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1844/hpr1844.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 10:01:22
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---
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This is HBR Episode 1844 entitled The Marant's PMD 660 Professional Solid State Recorder.
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It is hosted by John Kulp and is about 15 minutes long.
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The summary is, I talk about the recording device I inherited from my mother-in-law and use it to record the show.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by Ananasthhost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15. That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at Ananasthhost.com.
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Hey everybody, this is John Kulp and Lafayette Louisiana.
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I'm recording on a brand new device, well it's not brand new but it's new to me.
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This is a Marant's professional solid state recorder model number PMD 660.
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I have this device on account of an unfortunate event.
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My mother-in-law died about three months ago and among her possessions was this recorder
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and they thought I would like to have it since I do this kind of thing.
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My mother-in-law had it because she was an oral historian and she had bought a really nice microphone
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and recorder to use when she went out to do interviews and characteristically when she had the stroke
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that she died from. She was on the other side of the world and presenting a paper at a conference
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in Morocco. This presented some difficulties but we sorted it all out.
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But anyway, she was an amazing woman and she had a PhD in Asian studies.
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I think she earned the PhD in the late 1960s and was fluent in about a dozen languages including
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Arabic and Chinese and really hard languages like that.
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And so what she did for a living in her later years was to act as a travel guide to people visiting
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places like the Far East or she worked for the US State Department also and conducted foreign
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visitors especially Chinese visitors on tours of America. And so she was constantly traveling
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all around the world and making good use of her language skills. One of the most interesting jobs
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she had was to act as the guide for bailiff and the flex tones when they went on their tour of the
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Far East. And so yeah, an amazing woman. I was very very sorry when she passed away and I'm happy
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to have however this recorder and I will think of her fondly whenever I use it.
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Right now I'm using the internal microphones and so I'll do a more thorough review of the
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device I think when I get to my office but I wanted to do at least part of this recording
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using the internal microphones because this was marketed I think to like journalism professionals
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originally so that like reporters when they went out in the field to do interviews they would
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take this along with them and make really high quality recordings of interviews and stuff.
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Right now I'm sitting in my car port you can probably hear some environmental sounds
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like the car going down the street right now and I've got a very high tech setup. The recorder
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is sitting on a plastic chair in the car port and I'm sitting on another plastic chair.
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The cat food bowl is over there to my right and the cat water bowl is just next to it.
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I think the microphones actually sound pretty good. The reviews I've read say that you get much
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better result if you plug in an external microphone to it but I did a brief test while I was
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still up in New York. I brought this back with me from New York recently. My mother-in-law's apartment
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was in New York City and after they cleaned out the apartment they brought what belongings they
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thought some of the family might want back to my brother-in-law's place in kind of upstate
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upstate just a little bit outside of Manhattan they live in a suburb there so anyway we went to
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visit them last week and I brought this back with me but I did a little bit of test recording while
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I was up there. It's a solid state recorder you have to put in a compact flash card it's a very
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large version of an SD card I guess. Nowadays if you get a new Moranse recorder I bet it records to
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either an SD card or a micro SD card and I think you can get some kind of adapters like a compact
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flash adapter where you could put an SD card or micro SD card and get a little more recording time.
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The storage card that my mother-in-law had in the machine was four gigabytes and at the time she
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bought it that was one of the larger cards I think. This device retailed for about $600 if I
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read correctly and she had with it a microphone audio-technica microphone that I'll use when I
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get to the office a little bit later so that you can hear the difference there. Okay so I think I will
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conclude this portion of the show about the Moranse professional recorder now and then do the
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rest of it when I am sitting in my office using a plugged-in microphone.
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Okay I'm back and now I'm at my office and I'm using the microphone that my mother-in-law left
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with the recorder. This is audio-technica I can't read them on something 710. It's a regular microphone
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it's not USB so it's got an XLR input and one of the advantages of this Moranse professional recorder
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over my Zoom H1 is that it accepts XLR microphone inputs. The Zoom H1 is too small and doesn't have room
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for that so you can plug in a mini plug microphone but you can't do an XLR mic. The larger Zoom
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recorders like the H4 I believe will accept up to two microphone inputs using XLR connections and
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this one also has two inputs. I've been experimenting for the last 20 minutes trying to find a decent
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microphone sound using this mic and I could use a quick course from our studio guy upstairs but he's
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not around. This is still the summer vacation and so he's not here to tell me exactly what would be
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the best settings to use. What I have found and I read about a little bit is that if I get closer
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like this then the low end gets boosted abnormally and so I probably want to stay a little bit further
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back for a more natural sound. So as far as this Moranse recorder there are a number of things I
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like about it. Well first I'll say the things I like and then the things I don't really like.
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One it's got lots of physical buttons that are dedicated to do certain things. It's got a
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slider switch to turn it on. It's got a dial to change the microphone level and it's got a
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I wish I knew the technical terms for these. I need NYBEL's help here but it's got for the headphone
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volume it's got a knob kind of thing that's recessed in there instead of using like buttons to go
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down down down up up and so forth. It has a backlight that you can turn on for the display. It's got
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editing on board capabilities. I've not tried any of this because frankly I would rather just
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transfer the audio over to my laptop and then use audacity to do the editing but in a pinch
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you could splice things together, edit things out and stuff like that.
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The built-in microphones I think sound pretty good but I don't know that they sound better than
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the ones I have on the Zoom H1. The downsides for this the price is pretty high. The Zoom I got for
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less than $100 and it sounds excellent using its built-in stereo condenser mics or using
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another kind of microphone. What I do normally if I want to use my Sure SM58 mic over there,
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I will run it through my little mixer here on my desk and then make the outputs of the mixer go
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into the mini plug on the side of the Zoom. Here I don't have anything at all going in between the
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mic and the device. The device itself has the phantom power that's needed to power the microphone
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and it's got XLR input for the mic and so it's going straight into the recorder and I suppose
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that would be an advantage in that you don't have to have more than one component to use one of these
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XLR microphones. Downside is the power requirement is much higher for this than it is for the Zoom H1
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which runs on a single AA battery if you're on battery power. This takes four AA batteries
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or you can use it like I have it right now plugged into the wall using an AC adapter.
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What else? I don't like the compact flash storage. That's kind of a legacy storage type now and so
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it will be harder and harder to find new storage cards or probably the best thing to do would be
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to find a decent adapter and then just keep using SD cards with the adapter. The Zoom H1 takes a
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micro SD card and I've got a 32 gig one in my Zoom right now and I think that's why I can record way
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more. This seems to have more there excuse me there are three presets that you can use to set up
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different parameters for recording so I think by default the first preset uses the internal microphones,
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the second preset records in stereo using the external microphones and then the third preset
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uses external microphones recording mono and one of them you can switch between wave or MP3
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also and of course you get different recording times based on what you choose. There are quite a
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few parameters inside each preset that you can change and save according to your liking and so
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that's pretty cool I guess. The Zoom H1 does not have any presets you have to simply change
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parameters each time you want to change them. Whereas this one you can have fairly complex
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personalized settings and switch rapidly but from one to the other so that's kind of cool I guess.
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At the time this came out this is about a 10 year old recorder I believe it came out in 2005
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and so for that time it was probably about the best you could get. The Zooms are much cheaper even
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the Zoom H4 is a whole lot cheaper than this I think it's something like $250 or $300 my H1 was
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only $90, $95 and from I would definitely not have bought a Morance professional recorder myself
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but having inherited it I'm very happy to have it. I'd not tried it yet doing any kind of live recording
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of a music event which it looks like it would be entirely possible to do that because you can plug
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two microphones in here and you could have them set up at either side of the stage I don't know
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eight or ten rows back for a classical recording is probably what you would do but
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not sure what else to say it's definitely it's not as portable as the H1 either. I keep the H1
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in my bag at all times and I never even know it's there it's so small in light whereas this is
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fairly large and at least at the moment requires an AC adapter and an external microphone and all
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this stuff so it's not ideal you could if you had the batteries you could carry just the device all
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by itself and do interviews with it and stuff like that and it would sound good but I don't know I
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think overall I prefer my Zoom over this but it's always fun to have a new toy to play with and
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I'm happy to have this microphone also this audio technique of microphone retailed for $349
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and I would certainly never have paid that much for a microphone but I'm glad to inherit one
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and I'll be curious to see how good it sounds compared to the other things that I've used in the past
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anyway I think that's all I'm going to say for now about the Morant's professional solid state
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recorder model number PMD 660 I will talk to you guys some other time bye
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you've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at hackerpublicradio.org
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really is Hackerpublic Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomican computer club
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