Zoom H2 Handy Recorder
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The H2 Handy Recorder is a handheld digital audio recorder from Zoom first announced at the NAMM tradeshow in February 2007.
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[edit] Peripherals and Uses
Included in the retail box are an SD card, desk stand, handle for putting the H2 in a microphone stand, wind screen, 3.5mm TRS to RCA cable, earbud headphones, USB cable and power adapter.
The H2's good microphones and use of standard interfaces such as USB and SD mean that it is very flexible and can be quickly put to use for everything from interviews, band demos, podcasting, personal memos, etc.
In addition to the power adapter, two standard AA batteries can be used. To make battery power metering more accurate, there is an option to set whether rechargeable or alkaline batteries are being used.
[edit] Recording features
The H2 can record in WAV format (at 96, 48, or 44.1 kHz in either 16 or 24 bit depth). Recording to compressed MP3 format at up to 320 kbit/s VBR is also supported, but only in the 2-channel recording mode. Officially, the H2 supports SD flash memory cards up to 4GB but some models of up to 16GB SDHC cards have been confirmed by Zoom to work.[1]
When recording in mp3 format though, the highest frequency recorded appears to be 16kHz, and not the full 22kHz that the sample rate of 44.1kHz suggests. This is however, a limitation of mp3 which relies on the DCT to compress audio signals. Thus this is a constraint of the mp3 compression protocol.
[edit] Comparison with Zoom H4 recorder
Unlike the larger H4 Handy Recorder which preceded it, the H2 does not include ports to accept XLR or 1/4 inch cables, and so cannot be connected directly to microphones requiring phantom power. However, there are high-quality electret microphones which can be used with the H2, and there are 1/8 inch external mic and line level inputs, which are compatible with any general plug-in-power stereo microphone. Though the H2 includes its own microphones, external microphones might be called for either for less obtrusive recording or to make use of particular microphones.
Unlike the H4, the H2 makes no provision for multi-track recording but its 360 degree polar sound recording can record in 4 channel audio, which can later be translated to 5.1 channel audio using appropriate software.
The H2 shares another feature with the H4: it can be used as an audio interface to a computer. When connected to a host computer via USB, the H2 acts simply as a microphone, rather than as a recorder or as a file store.
[edit] Design Changes and Delays
The H2 began shipping on August 21st, 2007. This was delayed from the original May 2007 shipping date due to an improvement in the microphone design which included the addition of another microphone. Zoom felt that the original three microphone Mid-Side design was lacking in some respects so this was abandoned in favor of the four mic, W-X/Y design. These built-in high-fidelity electret condensor microphone capsules are arranged to allow stereo recording and have user-selectable parameters to allow for either a 90- or 120-degree pickup angle. The H2 can also be used to record a 360-degree soundfield.
[edit] See Also
The free software package Audacity handles all the H2 file formats, and facilitates editing and effects for recordings made with this device.
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Samson Technologies H2 page
- Zoom's Japanese website in English with more detail
- Product manual
- Review at O'Reilly Digital Media blog
- review on StinkFight.com, with multi-environment audio examples and photos
- discussion thread on O'Reilly Digital Media blog
- Audio review by Neal Ewers
- Zoom Gear & Home Recording Forum, Zoom H4 & H2
- discussion of H4 recording levels that may apply to H2
- Half-hour outdoor H2 recording made outdoors at night. Episode 50 of "Clone The Homeless"
- Zoom2Five Audio Unit and VST plug-in for Mac OS X: transcode H2 four channel surround to home theater 5.1 surround
- Review by Finn Margrie, filmmaker

