User-Recommended Equipment

This page has many very out-of-date notes in it. Please add a little bit about your own equipment experience and recommendations to the end with your initials and Month, Year. Thanks! (a.r.dobbs Sept 2007)

  1. User-Recommended Equipment
  2. Microphones
    1. Desktop Microphones
      1. Prosumer/Professional Microphones
    2. Headset Microphones
      1. Old Notes
  3. Alternative Recording Equipment
    1. Analog to Digital Converters
    2. Portable Recording Devices
    3. MP3 Players
    4. Recording with a Video Camera or Camcorder
    5. A few Notes on Alternatives

Microphones

A summary of microphones most widely in use at LibriVox is given on the Newbie Guide page.

Desktop Microphones

Prosumer/Professional Microphones

Headset Microphones

Old Notes

Alternative Recording Equipment

Analog to Digital Converters

Portable Recording Devices

MP3 Players

Recording with a Video Camera or Camcorder

Your video camera -- unless it's a very strange model -- records sound as well as picture. Therefore, it can be used to record you reading for LibriVox. You can even leave the lens cap on while you read. After you finish the initial recording, you will then transfer just the audio from the camera to a computer for editing and other needed processing.

You probably have connected your video camera to your TV, perhaps through the VCR, in order to play back a video recording on the bigger screen of the television. Connecting it to a computer to transfer the audio is similar, although you may need to buy or borrow a cable or connectors.

The simplest way to connect is through the headphones jack if your video camera has one. For this, you will need a special, inexpensive cable. It has a 1/8" (3.5 mm) stereo mini plug on both ends (#). One end goes in the headphones jack on the camera. The other end goes in the line-in jack on your computer. If the audio jacks are color-coded, you're looking for the one that's light blue. If they're not color-coded, your task is somewhat harder; often the two in and out jacks have graphical labels which look like sound waves (sections of concentric circles) and have a small triangle. The triangle points toward the jack for line-in (and away from the other jack for line-out). It's better not to use the microphone jack for connecting audio devices like the camera.

Once you're connected, follow the instructions below in the computer section for recording. Put the recording software you're using into recording mode and push the play button on the camera. What you will be doing is re-recording from the camera to the computer. As with all methods of recording with the computer, you should test your entire set-up to make certain you have the connections and settings correct. In particular, you will need to experiment with the volume control on the camera set to the proper level: moderately loud, but not really loud.

Notice that much of the above also applies to using a tape recorder. It gets connected to the computer through its headphones jack, too; even better would be the line-out jack if it has one.

A few Notes on Alternatives

For those of you who are not comfortable sitting at computer to record, relax. There are other alternatives. If the computer just isn't your thing, rest assured, You can even go out to your favorite bar and help LibriVox record something fun.

To explore some of these alternatives, look through the LibriVox Forum, especially the back pages of Need Help? Got Advice?

Folks, please add specific links here. Thanks!

UserRecommendedEquipment (last edited 2007-12-24 21:25:51 by AlanDavisDrake)