Welcome to the Rockbox Technical Forums!
Is it also possible to add the option to choose what frequency you are recording at? On my Sansa e280 , there is only one frequency, but I would like to record at a bit higher frequency.
Ah...ok I see. Why is that anyways? If I could change the frequency even to 24000Hz, I could get a nicer record.
Edit: It's not that strange of an idea, it's the closest I can get to HD Radio without the target having HD Radio and you can get a better sounding record from this.
What are ADC's ..?
1) I read that HD radio was the dual streaming of both analog and digital audio. So, recording with the microphone would be analog recording, and the built-in FM radio recorder would be digital. That is why I said that it would be closer, since you are getting an analog ( but mono ) record from the mike, and digital off the built-in radio recorder. It's not the same as recording of HD radio ( analog and digital ) , but as close as you are ever going to get.
2) It will sound better. Not improve quality, but sound a bit better. I found this when I had to record with only a mike. Having one radio produced good quality sound, but having two made the recording sound better ( but not improve quality ).
Quote from: redblade8 on October 06, 2010, 06:20:25 PM1) I read that HD radio was the dual streaming of both analog and digital audio. So, recording with the microphone would be analog recording, and the built-in FM radio recorder would be digital. That is why I said that it would be closer, since you are getting an analog ( but mono ) record from the mike, and digital off the built-in radio recorder. It's not the same as recording of HD radio ( analog and digital ) , but as close as you are ever going to get.Digital == AAC. This is like saying if you take your MP3s, convert them to AAC, and then back to MP3 they're sound better because AAC is better then MP3. Quote from: redblade8 on October 06, 2010, 06:20:25 PM2) It will sound better. Not improve quality, but sound a bit better. I found this when I had to record with only a mike. Having one radio produced good quality sound, but having two made the recording sound better ( but not improve quality ).No.
Page created in 0.055 seconds with 21 queries.