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Marantz

Marantz PMD660 Handheld CompactFlash Recorder

Marantz PMD660 Handheld CompactFlash Recorder
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Marantz PMD660 Handheld CompactFlash Recorder

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The PMD660 is small enough to fit in the palm of your hand, but it has features that make more expensive, full-sized field recorders green with envy. It can run for hours on just four AA batteries. It records on Compact Flash media cards which you can find in any discount store, and will store more than 36 hours of mono on a single card. If audio quality is your key requirement, you get over an hour of pristine, uncompressed, 16-bit .wav files. Editing can be achieved right there in the field using either of two editing modes, or you can use your favorite audio editing application by transferring files to your PC-the PMD660 even has its own USB port. XLR inputs, phantom power, built-in mics and more-it's all there in the PMD660.   Highlights Smallest PMD yet-fits in your hand Records uncompressed 16-bit PCM .wav files at 44.1 kHz or 48 kHz Records mono .mp3 files at 64 kbps Records stereo .mp3 files at 128 kbps Uses inexpensive, widely available Compact Flash media (CF) 1 GB CF card can hold over 1 hour of uncompressed stereo 1 GB CF card can hold over 17 hours (stereo) or 36 hours (mono) .mp3 Operates for four hours on four AA batteries Two XLR mic connections with +48v phantom power Two built-in condenser mics for easy, true stereo recordings Stereo line I/O Solid State Design No moving parts-no maintenance "Copy Segment" cut-and-paste editing to a new sound file 99 "Virtual Tracks" for immediate playback access of ...

 
List Price: $649.99
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Product Details
Product Length:14.61 inches
Product Width:9.19 inches
Product Height:4.13 inches
Product Weight:2.8 pounds
Package Length:13.2 inches
Package Width:9.9 inches
Package Height:4.7 inches
Package Weight:2.85 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 9 reviews

Features
  • Records uncompressed 16-bit PCM .wav files at 44.1 kHz or 48 kHz; onboard editing

  • Records mono .mp3 files at 64 kbps; Records stereo .mp3 files at 128 kbps

  • Uses inexpensive Compact Flash media; 1 GB CF card can hold over 1 hour of uncompressed stereo

  • Operates for four hours on four AA batteries; Two XLR mic connections with +48v phantom power

  • Two built-in condenser mics; Built-in USB port for easy file transfer; Stereo line I/O


Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:3.5
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

5Outstanding portable solid-state digital field recorder!  Aug 24, 2008
I have to say that I agree with the criticism that the cheap plastic exterior shell is a disappointment, but the performance of this lightweight, professional digital recorder more than compensates. I've used this sweet machine for four field recordings and it is such a tremendous pleasure to get outstanding recordings without requiring consumables (minidisks, tapes, whatever). I pop out the flash memory, plug it into my PC, and drag and drop the recordings, all set for editing. XLR mic inputs are quiet, lots of cool features, big highly legible display, but the bottom line is GREAT AUDIO QUALITY.

I tried the Olympus LS-10, which was so highly praised in reviews on Amazon.com, but it was horrid; the mic inputs were noisey, and the built-in mics bounced the sound back and forth from left to right channel rather than yielding a nice stereophonic sound image.

If you're doing professional work of any kind, and you need something portable, don't waste you're time and money on the toys. Get yourself one of these awesome PMD-660s.

29 of 30 found the following review helpful:

4I think some reviewers need to take a breath. This unit is just fine.  Dec 16, 2006
OK, I'm a professional musician with 30+ years of experience, four years at Juilliard, albums on CBS/Sony; there are my bona fides.

Pro: Reasonable price, good quality, typical Marantz UI (you'll get the most out of it if you use common sense and read the manual), no moving parts, common media

Con: It's not perfect. So there.

Look, people: I read these reviews and I get the impression that the people giving bad reviews are the type that walk into a Chinese restaurant and get their panties in a bunch because there is no Italian food. This is a tool, meant to do certain jobs well, at a certain price point, nothing more. If you want flawless fidelity, spend a few grand on a fast laptop and great external pres and other hardware. If you have $500, a fast CF card (I have a SanDisk Ultra II 2Gb and just got a SanDisk 4Gb w/firewire reader, hallelujah!), and some commonly available rechargeable AA batteries, you're good to go unless you're planning a commercial release-quality recording. I've recorded live music, voice lessons, speech, and opera singers' demos on this (using external mics of course), and am very pleased with the quality and particularly the value. I agree with the one review that a good solution is condenser mics with batteries and turn off the 48v, but I made a damn good recording of a pro singer (who was likewise impressed) using a Neumann KMS105 straight into the Marantz with 48v on, mono, at 44.1.

There is no such thing as the perfect machine. Marantz is not trying to sell it as one. It's great for reporters (I liked the review from the NPR guy in Tucson, he gets it), and great for music pros like myself, if you appreciate the value AND the limitations. Look, if I want a perfect digital recording, I'll hire a recording studio. If I want a perfect digital recording of a live situation, I'll hire a sound engineer who has the high-end road rig. But for my needs, and at its price point, this one hits the spot. I'm only sorry that a few people rate this as if it were a nearly useless POS. Well, it isn't. Just goes to show you what unreasonable expectations will do!

5 of 14 found the following review helpful:

1Disappointing  Oct 20, 2006
The PMD660 had all the specs i'd been waiting for: pro-quality wav/mp3 recording on a portable device with XLR (balanced) mic inputs for under $1000.

However, after becoming familiar with it - i've found that it is not such a wonderous device after all. There are minor annoyances such as having to mess around with 4 AA batteries, and that you need to use the AC adaptor (not batteries) to connect it to a computer via USB. But the fatal flaw is that the sound quality simply isn't very good. I get a huge amount of hiss - even when no microphone is attached! Recording spoken word is acceptable, but for any type of quieter, ambient sound there is simply too much hiss in the recordings to be of any use.

Definitely try this out before you buy. Maybe the quality is good enough for you -- but don't expect professional results.

11 of 11 found the following review helpful:

4Great Product  Oct 16, 2006
I am a radio reporter so having a good recorder is of the utmost importance to me. This product is outstanding and has served me very well for the last year. It is very easy to use and the sound quality is great. The only drawback is that this thing goes through AA batteries very quickly. Many of my colleagues have purchased rechargable batteries to make up for this, some (like me) just buy them in bulk from warehouse stores such as BJ's.

I highly recommend this unit for any radio reporter. Gave 4 stars, only took one away because of the abttery issue.

36 of 37 found the following review helpful:

4Better than anything else  Jun 13, 2006
UPDATED: Marantz has fixed the hiss problem with a powered microphone. It is a great little unit--only small problem is that it's tough to see the levels in sunlight. I work as an NPR reporter. We are switching to these units from Minidisc recorders. And frankly, I wouldn't switch back--the ease of input from the recorder to a computer is wonderful. There is indeed, a problem with noise using a powered mic such as a shotgun. I use a 15db pad between the XLR connector and the mic to dampen the noice. Works fine. A stick mic works very well by iitself. I am told that Marantz is working on a fix.

The claim that the unit won't read SanDisk cards is nonsense--I've been using them for three months without a glitch.

The record-level display is a bit washed out in daylight.

True, I mostly record voice and ambient sound, rather than music.
So I can't comment on full fidelity. But our audio is as good or better than anything else on the radio.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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