We're talking standard PCM wave files, the type you'd edit with your PC,
having said that there are various standards of Wave files and the 24/96
type might be different but in any case the Zoom H6 - given that the SD
card is formatted to FAT 32 - is going to have to split the file -
whether th
I never knew that a .wav file could not be more than 1.8gb in length
-- I am sure if I were to record 24 bit at 48000hz for 2 hours it
would be more than that.
On Tue, 31 Jan 2017 16:25:30 -0500,
Dane Trethowan wrote:
>
> It has to for several reasons.
>
> Firstly the standard wave file cannot b
It has to for several reasons.
Firstly the standard wave file cannot be over 1.8GB in length.
Second, the memory card is formatted to Fat 32 so - nmo matter what the
file format used - files can't be any longer than 4GB using the Fat32
file format.
On 1/02/2017 3:27 AM, Hamit Campos wrote:
All 3 files have audio right? because if they do and you didn't touch
the recorder the whole time this suggests this somehow and this is news
to me it automagically splits files. If that's the case peese out my
friends I don't know. What I thought of though is that remember this is
a multy chan
Hi!
I don't have this recording device yet and their could be a few reasons
why you're getting multiple files, my H1 did this also however with the
H1 there was no way to get around this and I wasn't surprised given the
price of the recorder so perhaps there is a setting that can be changed
i
Hi all.
I have a nice Zoom H6 digital hand recorder, and although it is a lovely
machine in terms of it's quality, it's a pig to use if you are blind.
On Saturday, I recorded a 2 hour concert at my local village hall.
The Zoom created three files, not one file.
In Goldwave, for example, you