Pro Tip: Always have charged batteries in those portable recorders, even if you're using plug in power. They are designed to switch to different power sources without interrupting anything. So if the power goes out, you have a bad power cable or (as stated in the video) someone yanks the power chord by accident, the device will keep recording no matter what. So PLEASE don't leave batteries in, just in case.
This way you also have kind of hot-swappable power sources. If you're in the middle of a recording and the batteries run low, I can plug in a USB power bank, the recorder will power via USB for the time it's plugged in, then I can replace the (rechargeable) batteries inside (make sure you put them in the right way) and unplug the USB again.
@@nicholazobtrglobalcomedy i just plug one end of the usb cable into my powerbank and the other end into te h6 🙈 not to make fun of you, that’s how it should work. maybe try another powerbank. ♥️
Hello! The power cable is a regular power adapter for a samsung phone. You can find a similar one at most department stores. Here is a link to one off of amazon! www.amazon.com/Anker-PowerPort-Charger-Compact-Foldable/dp/B07H8WJCTF/ref=sr_1_13?dchild=1&keywords=anker+charger+usb+2&qid=1633472109&sr=8-13
HELP: I want to import a music backing track to lay vocals along side to be mixed later IN THE H6. There is not ONE video that explains how to do this that works. I tried even converting the backing track to the specs the H6 is recording at on my laptop on the SD as I saw in a video but when I go back to the H6 and put the SD back in the H6 I can't find the backing track to play I want to use to lay vocals. I'm not talking about overdubbing I just need the track to be able to be referenced while recording. Can anyone help me or lead me to a very specific and good english video that shows how?