Hi everyone,
I’m new to audio recording and would really appreciate some help. My main goal is to record sounds of nature — birds, forests, streams — and sometimes the gentle buzzing of my bees, as I’m a beekeeper. For photos, I use a Canon R6 Mark II, and the video is fine when processed in DaVinci Studio, but the built-in audio is quite poor.
So I went looking for a better solution. After trying out the DJI Mic 2 (which didn’t suit my outdoor needs), I chose the Tascam DR-07XP mainly for its 32-bit float support, which is supposed to be more forgiving (similar to shooting RAW photos). The reviews and YouTube demos sounded great.
But I’m struggling with a persistent background hiss/noise in my recordings (using built-in mics, 32-bit float). I posted about this in a field recording Facebook group and got a useful reply from a member named Greg, who listened to my sample and responded:
Greg even cleaned up the file and shared the result (which was a huge improvement!), but unfortunately, he hasn’t replied to my follow-up questions about the tools and techniques he used.
- my original file: https://vt.orxion.net/test.wav
- Greg’s cleaned version LINK (google drive)
At one point I was ready to return the recorder (still within the 14-day window), but after hearing Greg’s cleaned version, I realized the DR-07XP can deliver much better results than I’ve managed so far.
So, I’m hoping for some advice from the Tascam community:
Thanks in advance for any advice — I really appreciate it and look forward to learning from your experience!
I’m new to audio recording and would really appreciate some help. My main goal is to record sounds of nature — birds, forests, streams — and sometimes the gentle buzzing of my bees, as I’m a beekeeper. For photos, I use a Canon R6 Mark II, and the video is fine when processed in DaVinci Studio, but the built-in audio is quite poor.
So I went looking for a better solution. After trying out the DJI Mic 2 (which didn’t suit my outdoor needs), I chose the Tascam DR-07XP mainly for its 32-bit float support, which is supposed to be more forgiving (similar to shooting RAW photos). The reviews and YouTube demos sounded great.
But I’m struggling with a persistent background hiss/noise in my recordings (using built-in mics, 32-bit float). I posted about this in a field recording Facebook group and got a useful reply from a member named Greg, who listened to my sample and responded:
“Both channels have significant DC bias, your signal to noise level is very poor. If I remove the DC bias your background noise is -70 dB with a max signal of -46 dB. That’s a pretty small dynamic range for a signal. Resolve the DC bias, improve the signal to noise ratio, use broadband noise suppression. Why are you recording at 96K, might be a little overkill.”
Greg even cleaned up the file and shared the result (which was a huge improvement!), but unfortunately, he hasn’t replied to my follow-up questions about the tools and techniques he used.
- my original file: https://vt.orxion.net/test.wav
- Greg’s cleaned version LINK (google drive)
At one point I was ready to return the recorder (still within the 14-day window), but after hearing Greg’s cleaned version, I realized the DR-07XP can deliver much better results than I’ve managed so far.
So, I’m hoping for some advice from the Tascam community:
- Is it normal to have DC bias and this level of hiss/floor noise on the DR-07XP, or am I doing something wrong in my setup?
- Any tips or best practices for eliminating DC bias and improving the signal-to-noise ratio, either during recording or in post-processing (ideally with Mac-compatible tools like Audacity, but open to other suggestions)?
- Is 96 kHz recording actually helpful for this kind of work, or should I stick to 48 kHz?
- Any recommended workflow for cleaning up nature recordings like this?
Thanks in advance for any advice — I really appreciate it and look forward to learning from your experience!