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#1
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Hello All,I'm looking to slowly expand my portable recording rig. The
Denceke AD-20 along with the phantom power supply usng 9-volt batteries is very attractive to me. I'm going to check one out and probably buy it tomorrow, unless there's a good-intentioned pro, who has an objection. I mainly record live shows with DAT and MD, so the Toslink S/P DIF out, seems like a good option. Open and Grateful for any help!Thanks, Mark. |
#2
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The Denecke is a damn good unit, and I would definately recommend it.
Ron Charles "stonedseven" wrote in message om... Hello All,I'm looking to slowly expand my portable recording rig. The Denceke AD-20 along with the phantom power supply usng 9-volt batteries is very attractive to me. I'm going to check one out and probably buy it tomorrow, unless there's a good-intentioned pro, who has an objection. I mainly record live shows with DAT and MD, so the Toslink S/P DIF out, seems like a good option. Open and Grateful for any help!Thanks, Mark. |
#3
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stonedseven wrote:
Hello All,I'm looking to slowly expand my portable recording rig. The Denceke AD-20 along with the phantom power supply usng 9-volt batteries is very attractive to me. I'm going to check one out and probably buy it tomorrow, unless there's a good-intentioned pro, who has an objection. [ ... ] It's a good little unit, and so is the Denecke stereo phantom power supply which works so nicely with it, and saves you the cabling mess--I wish that all phantom supplies had their output cables attached in the same way. The only quibbles I have with the AD-20 are these: [a] It's an absolute bare-bones unit with no low-cut filters or alternate sampling rates, etc., but it's fine for recordings that are destined for CD-R after just some basic editing. [b] If the battery runs down, its noise floor rises considerably. Do _not_ record with a run-down battery in this unit, even for a few minutes. [c] Its gain control knobs are tiny and uncalibrated; in dim light you can't even tell how far up or down they're set. [d] It will not work at all if phantom power (DC) is present at its inputs. It is designed to work with a phantom supply such as the matching Denecke unit that blocks DC at the outputs of the supply. Do not try to use the AD-20 with other phantom power supplies unless you've tested their outputs with a meter first. If DC is present, the AD-20's preamp will pass no audio signal at all and could be damaged. [e] Its inputs are undithered, so recordings made in extremely quiet surroundings can have audible quantization distortion at low signal levels. Frankly, what Denecke's Web site says about this (assuming that it's still the same as what they had up there for several years) is just ignorant bull****--they really should know better. However, by "extremely quiet" I mean "uncannily, eerily quiet." Under most normal circumstances this should not be an audible problem since the background noise of most live recording venues is enough to dither the converters' inputs nicely. Still, for any serious classical recording in a quiet studio or hall I'd want to use something a step or two higher up on the evolutionary scale. Unfortunately, the next step above the AD-20 is a big one. The MindPrint DI-Port is pretty much unusable due to its terrible implementation of 48V phantom powering--mine actually put out a small puff of smoke and died when I plugged in a pair of Schoeps mikes. And after that you've got only the Grace Lunatec V3 and the Apogee Mini-Me--luxury items in the $1200+ range which still have some problems of their own. Hmm, I don't seem to have any record of the unit's input overload point. One moment, I'll measure it ... OK, I see why I have no listing of it. The preamp doesn't seem to have an input stage clipping problem the way so many others do. If you set the gain control to its minimum setting, the converters reach digital full scale output with about a 400 mV signal, but at that point the preamp hasn't begun to distort audibly yet. For most purposes that's excellent headroom. The only exception would be if you're recording very loud sound with extremely sensitive microphones. Good luck, and please stop by and let us know what you think after you've used the AD-20 some. --best regards |
#4
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David Satz wrote:
[c] Its gain control knobs are tiny and uncalibrated; in dim light you can't even tell how far up or down they're set. THIS is what drives me up the wall with it. I can't deal with that at all since there is no way to set the two gains so they are the same. [e] Its inputs are undithered, so recordings made in extremely quiet surroundings can have audible quantization distortion at low signal levels. Frankly, what Denecke's Web site says about this (assuming that it's still the same as what they had up there for several years) is just ignorant bull****--they really should know better. This is less of a problem than it used to be, because now we have a bunch of portable systems that will take 20-bit inputs. Even a lot of MD units. It was a very serious problem when the thing came out and everyone was recording to DAT, and it was the reason that I eventually sold my unit. However, by "extremely quiet" I mean "uncannily, eerily quiet." Under most normal circumstances this should not be an audible problem since the background noise of most live recording venues is enough to dither the converters' inputs nicely. Still, for any serious classical recording in a quiet studio or hall I'd want to use something a step or two higher up on the evolutionary scale. I considered it sort of noisy, actually. It was fine with a good condenser mike but really unusable with a 77DX. Then again, it was very very small. On the other hand, it was a lot quieter than the stock preamps in the DA P-20, which were just plain unusable with a 635A. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#5
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