I've seen the posts on this battery pack. Where does it connect and what
kind of connector is used? Also, I have one more question for those who own
this product and that is if the battery dies or you change the battery does
the unit hold your settings or go back to default?

thanks,

Judy



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Rick Alfaro
Sent: Friday, November 03, 2006 10:34 AM
To: 'PC audio discussion list. '
Subject: RE: Edirol R-09


I think a much better solution for a case for the R9 is a trip down to
Circuit City, or Wall-mart or any place else that sells a ton of different
digital camera cases in all kinds of varying sizes and shapes.  This way you
can just about custom fit the case to your own particular needs.  That's
what I plan to do as soon as I order the battery pack for my R9.



--Warmest regards,

--Rick Alfaro
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Steve Matzura
Sent: Friday, November 03, 2006 7:00 AM
To: PC audio discussion list.
Subject: Re: Edirol R-09

On Thu, 2 Nov 2006 08:12:55 -0600, you wrote:

>Hi what I would like to know is.  What does the deirol 9 have the the
edirol
>didn't and what did the edirol 1 have the edirol doesn't have?  Also wich
is
>the better one the edirol 1 or the edirol 9 and what if anything is good
>about edirol units?  I mean has anyone ever done a side bye side comparison

>of the edirol 1 and the edirol 9?  If so please share what you think of
both
>units and witch you think is the better unit of the two of them.

9's battery power lasts longer.  Also, its microphones seem better and
better positioned--more like ears (on the sides).  It also wins
hands-down for accessibility.  It's also smaller.  It's also still
being manufactured.  That, if anything else, would win me over. Who
wants to buy something, even at deep discount, that isn't being made
any more?

Roland offers a carrying case for the 9, but it's stupid.  It looks
dumb, the pockets inside are all the wrong size for things you would
want to carry--too small for headphones, too big for mikes, too
oddd-sized for extra batteries, but maybe not, if you're willing to
just plunk them in there and hope for the best. Of course, if you get
a strap-on battery pack, you'll have to disconnect and unstrap it
from the rest of the unit to store it in the carrying case.

The R1's carrying case that comes with it is also dumb.  You can't use
it from inside the case--hnot that you can with the R09 and its case
either, but ... it's just a softpak for carrying it by itself.  You
can throw it in another case, like a backpack or briefcase or computer
bag, but compared to the R09, it's still big and clunky, not to
mention hard to operate because of too many buttons.  The r9 is far
superior in all aspects.  I'm just crazy about mine and take it
everywhere.  Ya never know when a good soundbyte may come your way!


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