M-AUDIO II User Manual

Page of 27
User Guide
17
MicroTrack II
10   Set input levels appropriately for this source 
<  
Press [REC]  At this point, MicroTrack II will either begin to record a file, or will enter the Record Pause 
State, depending on the Record Button setting found in the Options menu  (See the Record Button 
section of the Options Menu portion of this User Guide for further information this settings ) Now play 
the loudest sound you wish to record  If a file is being recorded, you will be able to delete the file as 
soon as you are done, if you wish 
<  
Use the [LEVELS] controls on the surface of MicroTrack II to adjust the input level so that it is as high 
as possible without peaking  The input level settings are represented as triangles in the level meters on 
the main screen 
<  
To stop recording, press [REC] again  If you have recorded a file (once again, depending on the 
Record Button setting) you may immediately delete the file, press [DEL] 
11    Once the recording levels and parameters are set, you may begin recording  Press the [REC] button to start 
recording a new file 
12   While a file is recording, you can:
<
Make adjustments to the recording levels if necessary, using the [LEVELS] buttons 
<  
Pause the recording by pushing in on the [NAV] wheel once  To resume recording, push in on the 
[NAV] wheel again 
<
Stop the recording by pressing the [REC] button again 
<
Delete the file being recorded by pressing the [DEL] button 
13    Once the recording is stopped, MicroTrack II will finish writing the file to memory  If you are recording a 
WAV file, and your recording exceeds the 2GB file size limit of CF or Microdrive media, an additional file will 
automatically be created with virtually no time lost between files  When recording an MP3 file, the recording 
will stop when a 2GB file size is reached, and the recorded 2GB MP3 will be saved 
 
 Adding Markers to a WAV Recording: If the [MENU] button is pressed while MicroTrack II is recording a 
WAV file, the Record icon will change from solid to outline for 0 5 seconds and a marker will be dropped at 
that location in the WAV file  When imported into Pro Tools, or other audio editing programs that recognize 
Broadcast Wave Files (BWFs), regions or cue points will be created for each marker  If your specific audio 
editing program does not recognize the extra data contained in BWF files, it will still read the recorded audio 
as a WAV file 
►  
Note: Markers follow the Broadcast Wave Format (BWF) standard. BWF files are 
files stored in WAV format that contain additional embedded data beyond basic 
WAV audio information, such as position markers. BWF files are stored with a .WAV 
extension. The audio software you are using on your computer must be capable of 
reading BWF information to take advantage of this feature. If your software does not 
recognize BWF data, the file will be treated as a standard WAV file and the markers 
will be ignored.  
 
 This feature is useful for journalists—they can place a marker before each question 
during an interview. It is also great for recording bands—markers can be placed 
between each song. Or, if gathering sound effects, a marker can be placed before 
each noise (as opposed to starting and stopping recording for each individual sound).
►  
NOTE: The [MENU] button is without function while recording in MP3 format.