electricpete
Electrical
- May 4, 2001
- 16,774
I want to record the sound of machinery on my Android phone. The main purpose is just to build a catalogue of sounds we have heard, so we can be more familiar with what's normal and what's not, and what a machine sounded like a year ago. Getting a good quality recording that sounds like the machinery is therefore important.
I have tried several of the programs available on Android, including:
PCM Recorder
Virtual Recorder
Tape Machine
One thing I find is that all my recordings end up with clipping because the environment (inside a machinery building) is too loud.
None of the programs has an input limiter. (Virtual Recorder and Tape Machine imply they do, but they really don't. Closer review of Tape Machine website explains why: the hardware controls to perform input limiting are not available to the Android programs).
So, I would like to try to reduce the signal before it gets to the microphone.
I can't move away from the machine, because that just tends to make the signal/noise ratio go down (I hear more background noise and less of the machine I'm interested).
So I'm thinking maybe I would put something over the mic. A piece of paper? A piece of masking tape? A cotton ball taped over? What would you suggest that might attenuate the signal but hopefully not distort the noise too much in the process?
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(2B)+(2B)' ?
I have tried several of the programs available on Android, including:
PCM Recorder
Virtual Recorder
Tape Machine
One thing I find is that all my recordings end up with clipping because the environment (inside a machinery building) is too loud.
None of the programs has an input limiter. (Virtual Recorder and Tape Machine imply they do, but they really don't. Closer review of Tape Machine website explains why: the hardware controls to perform input limiting are not available to the Android programs).
So, I would like to try to reduce the signal before it gets to the microphone.
I can't move away from the machine, because that just tends to make the signal/noise ratio go down (I hear more background noise and less of the machine I'm interested).
So I'm thinking maybe I would put something over the mic. A piece of paper? A piece of masking tape? A cotton ball taped over? What would you suggest that might attenuate the signal but hopefully not distort the noise too much in the process?
=====================================
(2B)+(2B)' ?