Archived from groups: rec.audio.pro (
More info?)
In article <4200d5ca$0$44858$ed2e19e4@ptn-nntp-reader04.plus.net> anahata@treewind.co.uk writes:
> > Each is more confusing to operate than the other. Check out the user
> > interface carefully and pick the one that makes the most sense to you.
>
> Yes: that's exactly the kind of detail that is very difficult to assess
> until you've actually spent some time with the unit, which is one reason
> why I asked here.
There are a few things that all might agree on, but what might be
difficult for me might be obvious to you. This is why you should look
at these units yourself. And don't use the excuse that you don't have
a local dealer, or that your local dealer sells one but not the other.
You can start with looking at manuals, which may be downloadable from
the respective web sites. The content and clarity of the manuals can
tell you a lot about how it's going to be when yo use the actual
product. Maybe make a field trip, too. Drive a half a day to a dealer
who has stock, take a look at it, make friends with the salesman, buy
it if you're ready, otherwise get his card and tell him you'll call
him with an order once you make up your mind. Have a nice lunch. Go
back home and reflect on your day.
Alternately, buy the one that your gut tells you is right, and if you
don't like it after a week or two, return it. Most dealers will let
you do that, and if you have to do it by mail order, the most you'll
lose is the cost of shipping. $30 in postage is a small price to pay
compared to a couple of years of fighting a clumsy user interface that
sends you to the manual every time you want to record.
> When I first posted they seemed to have similar specs - I've since seen
> that the Yamaha's dynamics processing available on all channels
> represents a hell of a lot more processing power than the Fostex's
> single assignable compressor and FX unit.
Good job! If you're going to be using digital inputs and outputs, make
sure that you know what format they're in and that it's something you
can use. Nothing like standing there like a dummy with an RCA plug in
one hand and a TOSLink jack in the other. Do the mic inputs provide
phantom power? Is it 48V? Can you control the phantom power on each
input individually, or is there one switch for all inputs? Are the
line inputs balanced? How about the line outputs? How many headphone
outputs? If there are more than one, are there individual controls, at
least a volume control, for each? Can you send separate mixes to each?
None of those are likely to be show stoppers, but the all have to do
with how convenient it will be both to set up initially, and to grow
as your needs expand.
--
I'm really Mike Rivers (mrivers@d-and-d.com)
However, until the spam goes away or Hell freezes over,
lots of IP addresses are blocked from this system. If
you e-mail me and it bounces, use your secret decoder ring
and reach me here: double-m-eleven-double-zero at yahoo