New Linear PCM Recorders shove Hi-MD MiniDisc
[ru]
Минидиск Сони уходит со сцены. Его замещают более практичные рекордеры на флэшках, без движущихся частей.
[en]

The lineup above may still seem surreal to many.
A decade of dominion by Sony’s MiniDisc over portable recording realm set a trend: If you need high quality audio recoding in the field - get MD!
So when Sony introduced Hi-MD with CD-quality PCM recording in 2004, MD followers proclaimed total rebirth of the format and predicted another decade of rein.
Appearance of one of the first solid-state portable recorders, Roland’s Edirol R-1 only reinforced certitude in MD’s power: R-1 was big, clumsy, inefficient on batteries, and very expensive in both main unit and additional storage flash memory prices.
2005-2006 promised big for Hi-MD
Sony released new top model MZ-RH1 Linear PCM Hi-MD recorder lifting most of Sony Music DRM nonsense for general consumers which plagued MD from the beginning in early 90s.
Priced at $300-$400 it spoke clearly against new Sony’s own flash based “pro” PCM-D1 Digital Field Recorder ($2000, first on picture).
Roland, however, came out with its updated Edirol R09, which is a hit to the day ($400 without memory cards). A bit less known maker M-Audio echoed Roland by cheaper MicroTrack 24/96. Still the market was deeply infant.
Enter cheap flash
Only now, as flash memory prices dropped below $10/1GB any real development could take place. And it took.
No, Sony didn’t lower price for its gorgeous PCM-D1, it still sells for almost $2K. However, they stripped those fancy analog meters and announced the resulting PCM-D50 for only $500 (2nd on picture). Apparently it’s got everything from its big brother except the meters and the corresponding 6oz. of weight. It features:
- Built-in high-quality electret condenser stereo microphones, sensitivity -35.0 dB/Pa 1kHz - only 3 dB less sensitive than PCM-D1, but with the same noise floor of 20.0 dB SPL (A)!
- Signal-to-Noise Ratio 93 dB
- Built-in flash memory 4 GB
- Good build quality of metal body
- Digital optical output
- Powered by 4 AA batteries
- In addition to D1 the mics of D50 are selectable between 90 degrees X/Y and 120 degrees A-B stereo
Sony, founder of the niche of portable recording (all started rolling with the invention DAT, predecessor to MD) was very timely having offered a more affordable unit as a number of unexpected players entered the field.
Tascam has been known for rack MD and other recorders. Now it expanded into portables realm. Tascam DR-1 (center on pic) looks very nice:
- 24-bit recording
- “only” 44.1kHz sampling rate, which is more than enough in real life applications
- SD Card media is half the price of Sony’s proprietary Memory Stick
- 1 GB card included
Built-in unswappable battery, the only notable disadvantage of Tascam DR-1, was likely the cause for price dumping. (BTW MicroTrack costs same $300 and features same battery drawback. Looks like internal Li-Ion is a big no-no in pro world.)
Real surprises ahead
Olympus, tainted by its involvement in trendy dictaphone market (as a byproduct having marred everything-flash when related to HQ Audio), gave absolute surprise. Olympus LS-10 Linear PCM Recorder (next to last on picture) is SO different from those silver sticks:
- 24 bit/96 kHz linear PCM recording - simply unbelievable for a WMA/MP3 adept
- high-quality microphone amplifier
- 2 GB built-in memory
- SD, SDHC Card support (No XD in Olympus! Can you imagine that?)
- 2xAA power
Still, the presence of WMA recording option tarnishes the developing image a bit. And a price tag of $400 is somewhat high for a market newcomer.
Finally, Yamaha, whom we know for heavy duty rack audio gear (including MD recorders) and big speakers, amazed with world’s smallest CD-quality Yamaha POCKETRAK 2G pocket recorder. For mere 49 grams (incl. batt!) it gives you:
- 16/44 “full-CD” Linear PCM recording
- High-sensitivity Tilt-up Internal Stereo Microphone
- 9 hours continuous PCM recording with 1 AAA!
- 2 GB built-in memory, no add-on card support
- USB 2.0 Computer Connection
- Studio Connections Integration
Now, is there somebody out there wishing to buy the latest model of a Hi-MD recorder?
Only $400.
Anybody?




July 11th, 2008 11:11am
Хорошие приборчики, однако!
September 24th, 2008 12:26am
А по русски?
September 24th, 2008 12:53am
The picture speaks for itself.
September 28th, 2008 11:14am
[...] PCM (Pulse-Code Modulation) recorder is not the normal IC voice recorder sticks. They are doing high quality digital sound recording. 24bit (expect the Yamaha and the Sanyo one you see the images, they are doing only 16bit/44Hz recording). (Link) [...]