Hello Jim
I know you are very helpful. Anyway as other said, recording have many
issues, but that not mean that is impossible. I will check what can i do
with my cables and the K3 and will ask for setting advice
My point is about this rule, and all that will be added in the future. What
happen if I recorded the contest and after it, I listen to audio file and
is bad, por example a common problem, the connector that comes off very
easily from the back of K3 line out, so, not audio file.
If my radio or my antennas fail, I will notice it and will change antenna
or radio.
If audio fail? what happened. I will not stop after the first 15 minutes
of the contest to start listening form my audio file to see if it´s OK. So
I will notice if after the end of the contest
Thats what I told in previous posts, I think is not something that we need
to do. And more knowing that it is not 100% sure that an audio file will
determine if you lied or not.
73,
Jorge
2017-03-06 17:41 GMT-03:00 Jim Brown <k9yc@audiosystemsgroup.com>:
> Jorge,
>
> With all due respect, making a recording of a contest by feeding headphone
> audio to a computer or dedicated audio recorder is hardly "professional
> audio." I've posted links to presentations and write-ups about simple ways
> to do it by hams who are NOT audio professionals. And as an audio
> professional myself, I've offered advice about very simple ways to do it.
>
> 73, Jim K9YC
>
> On Mon,3/6/2017 10:13 AM, Jorge Diez - CX6VM wrote:
>
>> sure, a great amateur contest station, not a profesional audio studio
>>
>
>
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>
--
73,
Jorge
CX6VM/CW5W
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