Jordontodd
New Member
Product In Question- https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B0719BC5FS/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
So novice is an understatement but I'm starting an information-based podcast that I'll basically be "engineering". I bought this product in the link above, although I notice a lot of Pyle products don't get the best reviews, this had a price of like $85 when I bought it last week and seems to have everything I need.
Now cut to me looking up how to record and I'm exhausted. I don't mind spending money to buy a digital recorder, because I can't be lugging in my desktop every time I go to their shop and "set up shop". I can't tell if it even has a way to do what I guess is considered Analog recording out from Stereo besides the "Main Out", all the other stereo ones say "In". And digital out of the USB without the use of computer I have no idea if that's possible. Can I get an external sound card and then hook up a digital recorder to that? What would be the ideal/smallest margin of error for a noob for that?
Help would be so appreciated. I already have 3 Behringer 8500 mics on the way with their respective cords, pop filter, headphone amp etc. If you can please not shame me for not buying the greatest mixer and help figure out a way to record this without the use of a computer. I'd love to take a flash drive or sd card and just pop it in on my computer at home after. I was looking at the Zoom H2 but don't know how that would work, I'm now at a wall and found the site and seems like a wealth of good info.
Bonus Question if you got the time: A guy wants to sell me a Multicom-pro XL compressor that he says will help a lot with clipping and levelling everyone's voices respectively. It sounds appealing, which I figured I'd send through the mixer on the send in/send out but will that work? And is it overkill for starting out right now since I already have the mixer? I want it to sound professional to the common person if I'm going to do this. I'm either slow (possible) or there's not a lot of info out there. Especially since everything is so specific for all the variations of products and setups and I have a mixer it seems like only 10 other people on Amazon have tried lol.
So novice is an understatement but I'm starting an information-based podcast that I'll basically be "engineering". I bought this product in the link above, although I notice a lot of Pyle products don't get the best reviews, this had a price of like $85 when I bought it last week and seems to have everything I need.
Now cut to me looking up how to record and I'm exhausted. I don't mind spending money to buy a digital recorder, because I can't be lugging in my desktop every time I go to their shop and "set up shop". I can't tell if it even has a way to do what I guess is considered Analog recording out from Stereo besides the "Main Out", all the other stereo ones say "In". And digital out of the USB without the use of computer I have no idea if that's possible. Can I get an external sound card and then hook up a digital recorder to that? What would be the ideal/smallest margin of error for a noob for that?
Help would be so appreciated. I already have 3 Behringer 8500 mics on the way with their respective cords, pop filter, headphone amp etc. If you can please not shame me for not buying the greatest mixer and help figure out a way to record this without the use of a computer. I'd love to take a flash drive or sd card and just pop it in on my computer at home after. I was looking at the Zoom H2 but don't know how that would work, I'm now at a wall and found the site and seems like a wealth of good info.
Bonus Question if you got the time: A guy wants to sell me a Multicom-pro XL compressor that he says will help a lot with clipping and levelling everyone's voices respectively. It sounds appealing, which I figured I'd send through the mixer on the send in/send out but will that work? And is it overkill for starting out right now since I already have the mixer? I want it to sound professional to the common person if I'm going to do this. I'm either slow (possible) or there's not a lot of info out there. Especially since everything is so specific for all the variations of products and setups and I have a mixer it seems like only 10 other people on Amazon have tried lol.