So just for an educational experiment, I tried out the DL built in recording feature at home. I set the recording bit rate to 16 bits first. I played a track from my other iPad connected to channels 15/16 (combined into stereo on the DL) I set stereo level on 15/16 and the master levels to zero. I hit record etc. etc. blah, blah, blah. Oh yes the gains were set at the middle range (5?)
Once the track was finished I dumped the wav file to my laptop via iToons and loaded the file into my DAW. The level was lower than the playback in my studio headphones while recording. I knew that! I loaded Ozone 5 (FX software) loaded the highest volume boosting preset. The volume was much louder, but not enough. So I boosted the volume level sliders within that particular preset and pushed the VU meters to just below clipping. This actually made the recorded track almost as loud as the original track levels. Not too bad.
The original track was an MP3 and the final was recorded as a wav file (we all know that the DL creates wav files when recording. No condescension intended
) It sounded pretty good considering the source and the recording medium.
I know that it’s not meant to do serious recording, but in a pinch and if you have a lot of spare time on your hands you can make a half decent 2 track stereo recording with your DL. Only if you want to, if you must, I guess.
You won’t go platinum with it though.
Over all recording a basic stereo mix down on the DL is not too shabby!