The plan was to stay with my Zoom H2 because it works well with casual recording of my voice. Then I went to make a piano solo recording using my Clavinova and realized how much I missed the XLR/Standard Phone Inputs that I had on the H4. I had some store credits with Frankieve, not enough to purchase and Audya

But enough to pick up the H4n. I’ve had it a few days, just some highlights of what I like about the unit.
It’s loaded with features most of which I’ll never use, but nice to have. This unit is miles ahead of the H2 and H4 in terms of quality. It really makes the H2 seem like a toy, despite the H2’s ability to produce good recordings. As soon as I picked up the H4n I could feel that it was quality built, it screams professional quality all the way with its heavier weight, rubberized body, large back light screen and large buttons. Included in the box is a protective plastic case to store the H4n when not in use. It’s much better than the cloth sack supplied with the H2 and original H4.
This is the easiest of the Zoom products to navigate with by a long shot. I was never happy with the jog type dial on the H4. One thing that uses to drive me crazy was hitting the fast forward or rewind functions; they hardly worked and required lots of finger pressure to keep them down so that they would work. The large fast forward and rewind buttons work as they should. There are 3 input buttons that let you choose to record from the built in mics or thru the XLR connections very simple, no navigating deep into menus to accomplish that. There’s another button that let’s you choose the recording format (mp3 or wav) once you tap that button you use a well constructed jog dial to pick exact format. Next to that button is a speed button that let’s you adjust the playback speed or the recording 50 to 150%. Tap the file button, that’s next to the speed button and you can easily scroll to any of the recordings stored on the device. There’s also a small built in speaker that reminds me of the portable 9 transistor radio I had some 50 years ago, but it’s very functional and it’s better than not having any speaker at all.
A couple of weeks ago I read a review that talked about how flimsy the door that covers the SD card housing. The reviewer said you can easily hit the door, it could pop open, then the SD card would disconnect and you’d lose what you were in the process of recording. Admittedly the door is a bit flimsy when compared to the quality of the rest of the unit. The way I see it that could happen only if you decide to throw the unit across the room while you were recording, I’m not going to try that. If you’re looking for a quality and not too badly priced unit priced recorder check this one out.
[This message has been edited by Stephenm52 (edited 05-08-2009).]