Products > vtsRecorder
vtsRecorder
For: Win / Mac
It can use all sound devices that are available.
This means, if you add a soundcard / box, your internal audio in-out is still available!
Thus, the external device handles your mics (and provides phantom power if needed), the internal sound ports can be used for the TC.
In my case I use TC over a BlueTooth dongle.
The receiver is a very simple Belkin H14,
it receives the TC signal and feeds it to the camera's sound input.
This means, if you add a soundcard / box, your internal audio in-out is still available!
Thus, the external device handles your mics (and provides phantom power if needed), the internal sound ports can be used for the TC.
In my case I use TC over a BlueTooth dongle.
The receiver is a very simple Belkin H14,
it receives the TC signal and feeds it to the camera's sound input.
This is a software based BWF / QT sound recorder.
Intended as a low cost dual system sound application.
It has Timecode in and Out.
It should work with almost all hardware available.
To see if your specific hardware is supported,
just download the demo and test yourself.
Main features include
-Record to BWF
-Record to QuickTime audio, with TC / Reelname.
(both 48Khz 16 bits uncompressed)
-Very accurate TC generator (drift < 2 frames over 24 hour)
-Very accurate TC reader
-Customizable offset for TC in/out (in case you use BlueTooth to transmit the TC)
History
Since I've bought a DSLR, I needed good sound as well.
Now imanual syncing on a clap is really outfashioned.
So timecode on an audio track seemed the way to go.
But, the cheapest BWF recorder with TC support I could find was more expensive than the entire camera...
That, and being Dutch, I've decided to make my own recorder.
The whole idea was, if I bring a laptop to the shoot to offload anyways,
why not let double as an audio recorder?
I now have a small touchsreen computer
Connected to that a Steinberg USB sound device with Phantom for my mics.
(It gets power over USB)
Current version is 1.02 for both Mac and Windows.
Intended as a low cost dual system sound application.
It has Timecode in and Out.
It should work with almost all hardware available.
To see if your specific hardware is supported,
just download the demo and test yourself.
Main features include
-Record to BWF
-Record to QuickTime audio, with TC / Reelname.
(both 48Khz 16 bits uncompressed)
-Very accurate TC generator (drift < 2 frames over 24 hour)
-Very accurate TC reader
-Customizable offset for TC in/out (in case you use BlueTooth to transmit the TC)
History
Since I've bought a DSLR, I needed good sound as well.
Now imanual syncing on a clap is really outfashioned.
So timecode on an audio track seemed the way to go.
But, the cheapest BWF recorder with TC support I could find was more expensive than the entire camera...
That, and being Dutch, I've decided to make my own recorder.
The whole idea was, if I bring a laptop to the shoot to offload anyways,
why not let double as an audio recorder?
I now have a small touchsreen computer
Connected to that a Steinberg USB sound device with Phantom for my mics.
(It gets power over USB)
Current version is 1.02 for both Mac and Windows.