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Zoom H4n
Portable Digital Audio Recorder (2007-)
© 2011 KenRockwell.com. All rights reserved.
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Zoom H4n (12.0 oz./339g with Ni-MH and 2GB card, about $300). larger. This free
website's biggest source of support is when you use these links, especially this link to it at
B&H Photo-Video when you get anything, regardless of the country in which you live.
Thanks! Ken.
Introduction top
Originally designed for musicians, the Zoom H4n has become especially
popular with DSLR video and filmmakers over other portable recorders
because it has direct XLR mic input connectors with phantom power, Search all B&H
and because it can record as many as four channels at once from both
the built-in mics as well as from two external sources.
This recorder works for for anything, especially audio for DSLR or other video. You put this
recorder up at your subject and let it run, then use software like Plural Eyes to sync the
audio to video later. You shoot from where you need to shoot, and the audio is recorded
clear and up-close in either direct-to-MP3 or up to glorious 96kHz/24-bit digital stereo
separately from your DSLR without any big mics on-camera, or even any wires.
As portable recorders go, this one has more features and is bigger and heavier than
others. It's not pocket sized, although it will fit in a big cargo-shorts pocket. You can just
leave it on a lectern, or mount it to a camera tripod with its ¼"-20 socket, or use the
included mic-stand adapter to use it with any mic stand and most any mic clamp. It's too
big for my tastes, but yes, you can mount it on a camera's hot shoe and either let it record
by itself, and/or plug its outputs into your camera's audio inputs.
Its digitally-controlled Auto Record Level control works great: it starts at maximum gain,
and knocks the level down as needed to prevent overload. Unlike analog ALCs, once
knocked down, the gain doesn't start climbing back up. The gain stays at the maximum
possible level for each take, never pumping up and down. For spoken word and reporting,
this is great. I use the Auto Level control and have one less thing to worry about.
It records as .WAV or as .MP3 files. It can't record both at once, but it can create MP3 files
from WAV files.
It works great. It is super-easy to figure out and immediately record broadcastable files.
When the REC light is blinking, you're ready, and when REC is solid, you're rolling. Want
to make a great downloadable file? Just set it to 128 kbps MP3, record, and upload. Done.
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Features
44.1, 48 and 96 kHz (ksps) recording at 16- or 24-bits as WAV files.
Built-in speaker.
Two-second pre-recording.
Multitrack mode to record individual channels. In playback, you can pan the channels.
Center suck-out mode to let you remove other people's vocals and solos.
"M-S" decoder matrix to record directly from your own M-S microphone array.
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Numerous guitar effects like phasers, chorus, delay, reverb, amp modeling and simulation,
as well as more programmable compressors and limiters (see manual starting at page
139).
instrument tuner for many types of instruments. A = 440 variable from 435 ~ 445 Hz in 1
Hz increments.
Shortcomings
Bare, unprotected microphones. Be careful!
No true stereo (spaced-microphone) mode. The mics don't move; the 120º position is still
coincident.
Slightly bright microphones if you're picky (but great if you want crisp recordings).
No Margin (maximum held level) display, nor do the peak indicators hold indefinitely. The
only long-term level indication is that the CLIP indicators stay on.
Unimpressive audio performance, even compared to a DAT recorder, for serious classical
music work — but more than good enough for audio-for-video.
No analog line-level inputs: needs an external pad to record from a board, mixer, preamp
or other recorder into the mic/instrument-level inputs, but that's not why people buy these.
No time-code.
Only one analog output: the headphone jack is the line output jack.
No level knobs; just up-down clickers for mic and headphone level that will be heard on
the recordings if you change either while rolling with the built-in mics.
Included
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Translucent plastic dust case, perfect for protecting the mics from damage and dust when
thrown in a big pocket or larger case.
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Wind Screen.
2 GB Kingston SD card.
USB cable.
Optional
RC-4 Wired remote control ($24).
Specifications top
Zoom offers no specifications for the recorder's audio quality (frequency response,
distortion, etc.).
See also the Zoom H4n Users Manual and Zoom H4n Brochure for more information.
It has no digital audio inputs or outputs, except for the USB interface and SD memory
card. It has only analog audio inputs and outputs. These are:
Inputs
24-bit 128x oversampling ADC.
No line-level input. For line-level inputs, use an external 20 dB pad (not included) with the
connections above.
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Storage
SD cards (16MB ~ 2GB), SDHC cards (4GB ~ 32 GB).
USB connection.
Outputs
24-bit 128x oversampliing DAC.
Only one 3.5mm stereo output with variable level. Use this either for headphones or for a
variable line-level output, but not both at the same time.
This output has the same output level (1V RMS max) and source impedance (12 Ω) as an
iPod Touch.
Paradoxically, the headphone output is rated simultaneously as 10k Ω load or more for
-10dBu, and also rated as 20mW per channel into 32 Ω for the headphones.
Mono speaker amplifier rated 400 mW into 8 Ω. No speaker connector; internal speaker
only.
FIle Formats
Maximum file size: 2 GB.
WAV
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16 or 24 bit.
MP3
48 kbps
56 kbps
64 kbps
80 kbps
96 kbps
112 kbps
160 kbps
192 kbps
224 kbps
256 kbps
320 kbps
Power
Two AA cells, rated 6 hours (11 hours in "stamina" mode only at 16/44.1).
USB power.
Display
1.9" black-and-white LCD.
128 x 64 pixels.
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Size
35 x 73 × 156.3 millimeters HWD.
Weight
11.955 oz. (338.9g) with 2-AA Ni-MH and 2GB card, measured.
Quality
Made in China.
Performance top
Listen to this sample recording of spoken word (12MB, 12-minutes at 128 kbps MP3
stereo) to hear for yourself exactly what it does well. This is the file directly from the Zoom
H4n, no editing, processing or anything. The recorder was 0.5m (18") away from me on a
table. It first was pointed at me (class only on the left), and then 2/3 of the way through the
program I rotated it to put me on the right with the class spreading throughout the image
and to the left.
While this $300 recorder would never be my choice for serious symphonic recordings
because it lacks the serious audio chops (noise and distortion performance) and the
spaced microphone placement I prefer (ORTF), the Zoom H4n is a huge hit with DSLR
videographers because its quality is way more than enough for film, and it has phantom-
powered XLR inputs and four-channels of recording, which other similar recorders lack.
Exactly like a camera, the quality of the final result has nothing to do with the technical
quality of the microphones and recorder, and everything to do with your talents as a
recording engineer. Placement and direction are everything. A real recording engineer
knows how to take his tools at hand and get fantastic sound from them, while a casual
user will often buy the best gear on Earth, use it blindly, and get poorer results.
Used well, the H4n will sound absolutely awesome for audio-for-video, although if you
really know what you're doing for recording symphonies, it's not exactly like a Schoeps
MSTC 64G, some real preamps and then your choice of serious pro recorder — but the
H4n isn't as heavy, and the H4n runs on batteries, too. My background is large ensemble
recording, but this is a mobile recorder for reporting and DSLR video.
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Sound
Bright
The built-in mics are slightly bright, and as conformed by their rated response, they indeed
are about 5 dBs hot on the high end:
This will make your files nice, crisp and clear, but watch out for hi-fi use.
There is audible output noise from the H4n's circuitry from the headphone jack as heard
through the Ultrasone Edition 8 above playback level 80, even with nothing playing. This
will vary with ambient noise and your choice of headphone.
Look out: there are turn-on and turn-off clicks and thumps from the audio output!
These don't affect the recordings, but they don't encourage me as to the competence of
Zoom's designers either.
No True Stereo
My biggest audio beef is that the Zoom H4n has no true stereo (spaced mic) ability, only
coincident X-Y at 90º or 120.º The 120º position does not separate the microphones. If
you want stereo the way I want it, you'll need external microphones. This is important for
music recording, but not a big deal for audio-for-video.
While Zoom's marketing poof tries to downplay this defect as a feature, the phase
differences imparted by true stereo (spaced) mic technique are precisely what creates a
full, broad and deep soundstage, especially as heard over headphones and earbuds so
popular today. The coincident X-Y arrangement completely eliminates all the interchannel
phase differences so critical to good stereo, although their lack does help improve mono
compatibility — if anyone is still listening in mono. Zoom's marketing is trying to turn their
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laziness and cost-cutting in skipping the spread-mic position and mechanical mic
protection into a feature.
Coincident X-Y recordings sound as if your two ears were just pushed into your head into
the same (coincident) position. It's like having your ears sucked together. It squashes the
stereo image into a one-dimensional line between the speakers. The phase differences
we hear because our ears are on different sides of our head is what contributes to the 3-D
stereo we hear naturally, and you need spaced microphones to record that.
When I play examples of coincident X-Y and true (spaced) stereo, the difference is
obvious. I prefer the ORTF (Office de Radiodiffusion Télévision Française) placement,
which is to angle the mics at 110º and have them spaced as far apart as your ears: 17 cm
(6"). This natural spacing adds air and dimension to the one-dimensional soundstage of X-
Y recordings, but the Zoom H4n can't do this without external microphones.
Recording engineers have been debating stereo mic technique for as long as there has
been stereo, so don't let my preferences distract you — unless you want awesome-
sounding orchestral recordings, which are my specialty but not why people buy the H4n.
If test tones are your thing, there is audible distortion and aliasing at places it shouldn't be.
These aren't significant for the intended use of the Zoom H4n. See Measurements for
more.
Ergonomics
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The H4n is easy to use. It only takes a moment to set it up for your first recording, after
which, you're set. Unless you're looking for an advanced feature, there's no need to read
the User's Manual.
There is no confidence head; you don't really know that your file will play back until you're
done.
There is a cloth battery-removal strap, a nice touch from the olden days of Japanese
audio equipment.
The LCD's aliased graphics also are ugly. For the same price, an iPod Touch is several
orders nicer in all ergonomic ways.
The level meters are small, but practical. They cover 48 dB linearly.
There is no recording level Margin indicator and no permanent peak hold, so you have to
watch the meters the whole time to set your levels.
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The Auto Level control works great, starting each recording with the levels full up, ducking
the levels as needed and never raising them. The Auto level control also tells you the level
setting as it runs, so you can note the setting and reuse it on the next take if you want.
The input LEDs flash like crazy when the input level clips, which is brilliant.
The big red REC light is great: steady means you're rolling and you can see it from a long
way away.
The turn-on and turn-off clicks and thumps in the headphones don't exactly encourage
faith in the H4n's engineering.
You'll hear the clicking of the up-down level pushbuttons if you click them while rolling with
the built-in mics.
The units of recording and playback level settings are arbitrary. They sadly are not in
decibels.
Mechanics
It's quality is typical for what comes out of China today: almost all plastic, with rubbery
sides.
The exposed mics are a weak point. They have no protection as on many other recorders.
Measurements top
The Zoom H4n doesn't look very good when measured, which is probably why Zoom
doesn't specify anything about audio performance.
You won't hear any of these audio defects when used as intended, but it's sad that any
decent 44.1/16-bit DAT recorder of 20 years ago still can run rings around the "96/24-bit"
Zoom H4n technically.
All measurements were made as powered by two Sanyo AA Eneloop. The advantage of
this is complete isolation as compared to using USB or an AC adapter.
I used a $50,000 Rohde & Schwarz UPL audio analyzer to perform these measurements.
Input Levels
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*levels below 1 oddly lower the level but don't allow full modulation. These level settings
are useful only for fading inputs.
*levels below 1 oddly lower the level but don't allow full modulation. These level settings
are useful only for fading inputs.
Output Level
1.00v at 0.2% THD into 200kΩ, 600 Ω or 300 Ω.
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Output Impedance
Analog output impedance measures 12 Ω at 1 kHz.
Frequency Response
Compared to a DAT recorder, this is sloppy, but for its intended real-world use, just fine.
Low-Cut Filters
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This shows the OFF and each of the other positions from 80 Hz to 237 Hz.
This is measured passed-through in the REC mode, not as complete record-play. I have
no idea why, and I did confirm that the high-frequency response really does measure
dropped like that. The H4n's meters also confirm this.
My wildest guess as to why the HF rolls off when measured as pass-through is that it's
some sort of leak-through between the live input and processed (slightly delayed) signals,
but otherwise, beats me why rec-play response is fine, but audio pass-through measures
so weird when measured live in the REC mode. It sounds OK. I suspect there is some
input-output feed through during record, but I'm not going to spend any more time trying to
track this down.
OFF
80 Hz
98 Hz
115 Hz
133 Hz
150 Hz
168 Hz
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185 Hz
203 Hz
220 Hz
237 Hz
Distortion
With sine waves, there is audible distortion a few decibels below full scale.
Just as bad, there is audible aliasing (false tones) with sine-wave inputs around 5 kHz, 10
kHz, 15 kHz and 20 kHz. This is poor performance and exposes sloppy design. Even
Sony's first portable digital recorder of April, 1981 (the PCM-F1) didn't have these
problems over thirty years ago.
I'm disappointed that 30 years later that this little recorder doesn't sing well here, but
tough, for its intended purpose, this isn't a problem.
Heck, deliberate distortion is often part of many carefully done recordings. Artists spend
thousands of dollars on plug-ins that model tube amp and analog tape distortion, so party
on.
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Zoom H4n THD versus level, analog input to analog output. (R&S UPL.)
In this graph, ref 0 DBFS was 71.2 mV input at the balanced LINE inputs, input gain was
set to 50, output at 0 dBFS was set to 1 V RMS. This was at 44.1/16; it measured the
same with all the other WAV formats.
This is very sloppy performance. When I measured the THD versus level of a 1996 Sony
PCM-R700 DAT recorder in its poorest 32kHz 12-bit LP mode, it was a little better! The
Zoom H4n is wasting much of the potential of digital recording, but again, so what: no one
will hear this for video and your mic technique is far, far more important than lab
performance.
Measured digitally from the digital file recorded under the same conditions (not the analog
outputs of the recorder as above), THD (d2 - d9) measures:
Sadly this shows us that the weak part of the chain is the recorder, not playback, so these
distortions are in the files, not the Zoom H4n's playback.
Not shown in these pure THD measurements (as opposed to THD + N measurements)
are the audible aliases with large sine-wave amplitudes around 5 kHz, 10 kHz, 15 kHz and
20 kHz.
Also bad is that THD actually becomes audible at about -6 dBFS and above with sine
waves, as the strong 0.1% THD would suggest.
Here is an expanded scale around 0 dBFS to investigate the early clipping of the H4n.
Note how distortion really takes off at -1 dBFS, which is poor, as it cheats us out of about
1 dB of dynamic range. It shouldn't take off like that until after 0 dBFS (clipping). At 0
dBFS, the H4n measures 2% THD, while a decent DAT recorder in its usual 44.1/16 mode
measures about 0.002% THD at full-scale.
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Zoom H4n Distortion versus level, analog input to analog output. (R&S UPL.)
Noise
Audible noise: Line/Headphone Outputs
With the Ultrasone Edition 8, output amplifier noise is heard even at idle (no signal) at
about level "80" and above, depending on your hearing acuity and ambient noise level.
Signal-to-Noise Ratios
Input 100 mV balanced at 1 kHz, input gain at 39, output 1 VRMS (output gain at 84),
measured analog input to analog output:
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These are poor readings for 16 bit audio recorders. The good DAT recorders I've tested
measure about 6 dBs better under the same conditions, even in their 12-bit LP modes!
(DAT machines use clever curve-fitting algorithms to retain high SNRs in 12-bit modes;
these 12-bit modes are not linear PCM.)
Again, the bad news that the files themselves have more noise than I'd like to see. The
biggest noise contributor is not the playback of the H4n.
This goes to show us that, as expected, the claimed 24-bit modes of the Zoom H4n are
baloney, and although they really do wiggle all 24 bits, only the top 15 bits actually have
audio on them. The lower 9 bits are just wasting file space as noise.
I have yet to test any other modern portable file recorders to see if they are any better.
I can't stress strongly enough that only an expert recordist will ever hear this noise or any
of the other measured defects. Most people, even many pros, never get their gain
structures right and have more noise coming out of their mixers and consoles than any of
these recorders have.
Usage top
The Zoom H4n recorder works for for anything, especially for audio for DSLR or other
video. You put this recorder up at your subject and let it run, then use software like Plural
Eyes to sync the audio to video later. You shoot from where you need to shoot, while the
audio is recorded clear and up-close in either direct-to-MP3 or up to glorious 96kHz/24-bit
digital stereo, separately from your DSLR without any big mics on-camera, or even any
wires.
I'd set it to 128k MP3 as a default. 128kbps MP3 sounds great for reportage, and is small
enough to use as-is for podcasts. The lowest 48kbps MP3 sounds awful; it's for reporting
from BF Egypt over dial-up data lines.
Forget the 24-bit modes. They sadly have no better performance than the 16-bit modes.
Likewise, the 96 kHz modes serve no sonic purpose on the H4n; if you need higher
technical performance, use some other kind of recorder.
Setting these file formats is as easy as pressing the WAV/MP3 button on the front; you
don't need to use the menu system.
When you change the batteries, the clock only stays alive for three minutes. Take longer
than that, and you'll have to reset the clock.
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I prefer to use the Auto Level control setting, which requires an easy menu change. The
ALC only reduces level from maximum and never raises it during a take. The LCD shows
the new set level each time it reduces it. If you like that level, feel free to set it manually for
the next take.
The Zoom H4n restarts file numbers from 0 every time the card is formatted.
The " Stamina" mode is a mystery battery-saver mode never fully explained to English
speakers. To use it, slide the switch inside the battery compartment, and then only when
the Zoom H4n restarts or turns on again does the mode take effect. The Stamina mode
records in 44.1/16-bit WAV only.
Be careful not to push the SD card door while rolling, because the card might pop-out!
Twist each microphone to change its angle between 90º and 120.º
To delete a file, press MENU > FILE > (select file) > DELETE > YES.
By default, the backlight stays on for 15 seconds. Use the menu system to set it to 30
seconds, or always OFF or always ON.
See also the Zoom H4n User's Manual for the details.
Recommendations top
If you need to record from professional XLR or phantom-powered mics, the Zoom H4n has
been the least expensive recorder that does it all. That's why the Zoom H4n is so popular.
The Tascam DR-100 also has phantom-powered XLR inputs, but costs more and lacks 4-
channel recording. The new Tascam DR-40 costs less and has XLRs, phantom power,
true stereo recording and four tracks, too. I haven't played with it.
4 channels on the H4n lets you record both the subject, and the background with external
microphones, each in glorious stereo for later mixing for your project.
If you don't need XLR inputs, I'm also going to look at the Sony PCM-M10, which costs
less, looks better, has spaced microphones, might perform better technically, has a real
input level control, has 4GB of internal memory, and is smaller and lighter.
If you've found the time I spent researching, measuring and sharing this information, this
free website's biggest source of support is when you use these links, especially this link to
the H4n at B&H Photo-Video when you get anything, regardless of the country in which
you live. Thanks! Ken.
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The biggest help is when you use any of these links to Adorama, Amazon, eBay, Ritz,
Calumet, J&R and ScanCafe when you get anything, regardless of the country in which
you live. It costs you nothing, and is this site's, and thus my family's, biggest source of
support. These places have the best prices and service, which is why I've used them since
before this website existed. I recommend them all personally.
If you find this page as helpful as a book you might have had to buy or a workshop you
may have had to take, feel free to help me continue helping everyone.
If you've gotten your gear through one of my links or helped otherwise, you're family. It's
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If you haven't helped yet, please do, and consider helping me with a gift of $5.00.
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