Thumbnails of artists described in podcast

After several days of near-tropical conditions that dovetailed nicely with the Al Gore-Captain Planet campaign, Chicago's weather took a turn for the chilly -- so, rather than hoofing it over to Daley Center and hopping on the CTA Blue Line, I decided to catch the express bus to the Ogilvie Transportation Center and ride the big Metra train home.
Publicity shot of Edirol R-09 digital recorder
I miscalculated, however, and had about an hour to kill before the next train, so I decided to do a recording test of an Edirol R-09 digital recorder I acquired the other day for podcast field work. This tiny recorder is about the size of a mobile phone and records MP3 and WAV files onto an SD card.

To put the R-09 through some real-world paces, I just babbled on for about a quarter-hour about how surprised I was a few days back when I looked at my most-played tracks in iTunes. Some of the top selections are from Nora O'Connor, Sir Adrian Boult, Basil Poledouris, the Union Pacific Railoroad and Chris LeDoux.

Although the R-09 accepts external microphones, I was more concerned with how its built-in stereo mics would work when using the recorder in stealth mode. I turned off AGC, set the input level at midpoint, and held the unit to my ear as if I were talking on a cellphone.

The results could have been a whole lot worse, although, just like my experience with the Edirol R-1, I think the levels were too low. This might have been more because of my settings than any fault of the unit itself, since I suppose I could have boosted the levels by turning on the automatic gain control or manually increasing the input. I didn't want to turn on AGC, since most recorders I've used -- analog or digital -- introduce hiss or noise in this mode, and I had managed to clip the sound when setting the input levels too high manually. (Speaking of hiss, I have to admit that it wasn't until reading reviews of recorders for podcasters that I even noticed hiss unless it was really extreme. Hiss usually is just an artifact I learned to accept, sort of like the occasional pop or click in a fine vinyl LP.) Anyway, I dealt with the slightly low levels by running the file through Levelator to bring it up a little.

I suppose I also could have waited to purchase this little gadget until hearing what Phil Clark of The Brit and Yankee thinks of the R-09 in his upcoming review of the unit in Podcast User Magazine, but then I would have missed the excitement of an impulse purchase.

Selected R-09 reviews

Mark Nelson

Peter Kirn

Amazon customers

Sweetwater customers

Jeff Towne


ChicagoScope feedback line: 312-683-5272.

Direct download: r09test.mp3
Category: Technology -- posted at: 12:31 AM
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About Me
I'm Leigh Hanlon, a writer and photographer in Chicago. Before moving to the Windy City, I worked at daily and weekly newspapers in Arizona, Colorado and Wyoming. (Photo by Marty Larkin)


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ChicagoScope Orbit

Autry Cowboy Code
Am. WideScreen Museum
Audio Pod Chronicles
Kevin Banford
Ursula Barzey
Barely Podcasting
Mark Bazer
The Brit and Yankee
Center for UFO Studies
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Chicago Bites
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It's Fourth and Long
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Selected ChicagoScope podcasts are digitized using original analog magnetic tape from our faithful Marantz PMD222 monaural and PMD430 stereophonic cassette recorders. Otherwise, content is digitally captured with Marantz PMD660 or PMD620 recorders. During editing, some material is recorded directly into GarageBand on an Apple Macintosh PowerBook equipped with an Applied Research and Technology Tube MP preamp.


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ChicagoScope Podcast Audio and Text by Leigh Hanlon is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

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