Martin Catt
March 20th, 2010, 10:47 PM
Just thought I would pass on the information that a Microtrack 24/96 digital audio recorder can successfully be converted to run off three 1.5-volt alkaline batteries. The lithium battery in mine finally gave up the ghost, and M-Audio has raised the price for installing a new lithium battery to $120.00 USD.
The process is pretty simple. The hard part is figuring out how to get the unit open. The case snaps shut. A quick search on the internet will give you instructions on how to crack open the case:
M-Audio micro track battery replacement guide (http://www.greendog.co.uk/microtrack/index.php)
The intent of the above site is to install a new lithium battery; however, I don't like internal non-user-replaceable rechargeable batteries. I want something where I can swap in a new set of batteries when one set has drained and continue recording.
Anyhow, after opening my unit and doing some testing, it seems that three 1.5 volt cells (for a total of 4.5 volts) will power the unit with no further modifications to the circuitry. I found a plastic battery case for three AA cells, attached it to the back cover of the Microtrack, removed the original lithium battery, and soldered the AA battery pack leads to the circuit pads where the lithium battery had been connected.
Current drain seems to average about 200 milliamps during normal operation, so assuming alkaline AA batteries are rated about 2000 MAH, you should get roughly at least four hours on a fresh set of AA's. I've set my unit up with an external power jack so I can use a larger 3 D-cell pack for longer run times. As an added bonus, the on-screen battery indicator appears to function as well, showing the charge state. I need to run down a few sets of batteries to see how well the indicator tracks charge level. Based on what I'm seeing on my ammeter, there's a pretty steep current drain at startup, but then it levels out at around 200-250 milliamps, depending on what you're doing (phantom power, display backlight, etc).
I haven't tried connecting the unit to a computer through the USB port using disposable batteries, and don't plan on doing so. I download my files off the compact flash card using a card reader.
Anyhow, just thought I would pass the information along.
Martin
The process is pretty simple. The hard part is figuring out how to get the unit open. The case snaps shut. A quick search on the internet will give you instructions on how to crack open the case:
M-Audio micro track battery replacement guide (http://www.greendog.co.uk/microtrack/index.php)
The intent of the above site is to install a new lithium battery; however, I don't like internal non-user-replaceable rechargeable batteries. I want something where I can swap in a new set of batteries when one set has drained and continue recording.
Anyhow, after opening my unit and doing some testing, it seems that three 1.5 volt cells (for a total of 4.5 volts) will power the unit with no further modifications to the circuitry. I found a plastic battery case for three AA cells, attached it to the back cover of the Microtrack, removed the original lithium battery, and soldered the AA battery pack leads to the circuit pads where the lithium battery had been connected.
Current drain seems to average about 200 milliamps during normal operation, so assuming alkaline AA batteries are rated about 2000 MAH, you should get roughly at least four hours on a fresh set of AA's. I've set my unit up with an external power jack so I can use a larger 3 D-cell pack for longer run times. As an added bonus, the on-screen battery indicator appears to function as well, showing the charge state. I need to run down a few sets of batteries to see how well the indicator tracks charge level. Based on what I'm seeing on my ammeter, there's a pretty steep current drain at startup, but then it levels out at around 200-250 milliamps, depending on what you're doing (phantom power, display backlight, etc).
I haven't tried connecting the unit to a computer through the USB port using disposable batteries, and don't plan on doing so. I download my files off the compact flash card using a card reader.
Anyhow, just thought I would pass the information along.
Martin