---
product_id: 605890922
title: "Portacapture X6 32-bit Float Portable Audio Recorder"
brand: "tascam"
price: "£399.09"
currency: GBP
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 5
category: "Tascam"
url: https://www.desertcart.co.uk/products/605890922-portacapture-x6-32-bit-float-portable-audio-recorder
store_origin: GB
region: United Kingdom
---

# 2.4-inch intuitive touchscreen 6 simultaneous tracks recording 32-bit float, 96kHz pristine capture Portacapture X6 32-bit Float Portable Audio Recorder

**Brand:** tascam
**Price:** £399.09
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> 🎧 Capture brilliance anywhere, anytime—your portable pro studio awaits!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Portacapture X6 32-bit Float Portable Audio Recorder by tascam
- **How much does it cost?** £399.09 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.co.uk](https://www.desertcart.co.uk/products/605890922-portacapture-x6-32-bit-float-portable-audio-recorder)

## Best For

- tascam enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted tascam brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Power On The Go:** Run for 60+ hours via USB-C power bank—perfect for long shoots and spontaneous sessions.
- • **Multi-Track Mastery:** Record up to 6 tracks simultaneously for podcasts, music, or field work with ease.
- • **Touchscreen Control:** Navigate effortlessly with a large, app-like 2.4-inch color touchscreen interface.
- • **Studio-Grade Clarity:** Capture every nuance with 32-bit float, 96kHz recording—never miss a detail.
- • **Versatile Mic Inputs:** Dual XLR inputs plus dual built-in mics with switchable AB/XY patterns for ultimate flexibility.

## Overview

The Tascam Portacapture X6 is a lightweight, portable audio recorder engineered for professionals who demand pristine 32-bit float, 96kHz multi-track recording. Featuring a large 2.4-inch touchscreen, dual XLR inputs, and sensitive built-in mics with switchable patterns, it offers versatile recording setups for music, podcasts, and fieldwork. Its robust circuitry ensures low noise and high fidelity, while USB-C power compatibility delivers extended battery life for on-the-go creativity. Despite a plastic chassis and a learning curve in UI, it stands out as a top-tier, budget-friendly solution for capturing studio-quality audio anywhere.

## Description

Never miss a moment. Capture audio anywhere with the Portacapture X6. The intuitive app-like operations on its large color screen make it easy to record or sweeten up your audio in post. Record using the X6’s dual built-in microphones or plug in your own mics to its 2 XLR inputs. The recording quality on the Portacapture X6 will be your secret weapon. Its 96 kHz/32-bit float recording technology means that you can capture audio softer or louder than ideal, assuring that you will never miss that moment.

Review: The X8 is just a bit too large and conspicuous for me so I got the X6 because it's more useful in more random situations and easier to carry around. I'm an engineer so I took it apart and examined all the circuitry and general build. My conclusion is that TEAC/Tascam did a pretty fantastic job with the design for this unit. Much of the money you're paying, is going into the circuitry - which is indeed complex and high quality. Very good opamps (OPA1678's, which you can replace with OPA1656's if you like, for a little improvement), great ADCs (AKM AK5704's), high quality dual clocks from Kyushu Dentsu (KDK) - one for 44.1kHz, and another for 48/96kHz. The device runs on a single core Cortex-M7 ARM CPU at 600MHz, and it has 128MB of RAM. All the audio routing and processing is done on an CPLD/FPGA from Lattice which costs twice as much as the CPU. I'm guessing that the reverb functionality is implemented through it as well, effectively "in hardware". The good: -What I haven't see anyone mention - you can run the X6 (and presumably X8 as well) from a USB-C power bank, even without the AA present in the unit. I got an estimate of 60-90 runtime hours from a 25000mAh battery bank. It seems to have good power filtering for USB-C as well, so power noise doesn't couple into the analog circuits much at all. -Excellent circuit design (unit is engineered by TEAC with their extensive experience in audio, they have their high-end "Esoteric" parent brand after all). -Internal shielding is fairly elaborate (thick metal plate between digital and analog portions of the circuit, which keeps self-noise very low. BUT, this device is not as resistant to external interference (plastic case and all). If you place a phone or other electronics next to this device, it will pick up various EMI interference which will be extremely audible especially at high gain. So the upside is that the device is light (unlike heavy chonkers from Sound Devices etc), but you don't have as much external electrical noise immunity. Keep this in mind~ -Sealed dome switches for keys (not membranes) - should last for a long time. -Plastic case is actually pretty high-precision and cleverly designed when it comes to molding. Subtle thing and no one likes plastic anyways, but it's well made at least. -Pleasant noise floor signature (gained up to the max, the noise sounds like brown more than white - it's soft) -Built-in mics are very sensitive with low self-noise for the price of the device -Gimmicks aside ("ASMR" mode etc lol), the device is straightforward to use. UI isn't the best nor the most intuitive but you get used to it quickly. Just accept it and move on lol. -32-bit mode is indeed excellent and captures the entire dynamic range of sounds with its dual ADCs per input, so you can recover peaks in post, or gain up the audio with no drawbacks -I tested this device with a Samsung S24 Ultra and it works fine as an audio interface there. I was able to get MotionCam Pro to use this device as a sound input (only when the X6 is set to 48kHz/32-bit), at which point MotionCam Pro was able to include 32-bit 48kHz uncompressed audio from the X6 into the RAW video files, which is what I wanted. You do have to set the audio profile to "Unprocessed" in MotionCam. I've written my own multi-threaded decoder for their .mcraw files for Linux (.mcraw to DNG+Proxy), so I can now have RAW video + "RAW" (32-bit) audio in single files that are easy to edit, which is pretttyyy coooool as probably a world first. The bad: -The #1 issue to me as an engineer (which I haven't seen anyone bring up before for this device), is in how the device handles its high pass filter (low-cut filter) when it comes to the BUILT-IN mics. This filter is applied digitally (post-preamp, post-ADC), which means that when it comes to wind or loud surrounding bass, the built-in mics will already clip the preamp/ADCs, so you're applying low-cut to a clipped waveform at that point, which will retain all the distortion components from that clipping. This is terrible, and I've seen complaints on Reddit about this device clipping lows in unexpected situations. Many external mics have low-cut filters built into the mics - which is what you want. Low-cut filters should ideally happen in the analog domain, before digitizing. This would've required more parts and board space, so I can see why TEAC/Tascam didn't do that. But - that's how you'd avoid clipping your preamps/ADCs. This device saves money by doing this digitally, but that means that to use this recorder professionally in the field, you have to have phenomenal quality wind filters on it. Cheap stuff won't do, cause you REALLY need to get rid of anything that's gonna clip the lows on those mics (which are unfortunately/fortunately great at capturing low frequencies). -Given that all the money went into the circuitry, you sacrifice overall build quality. Almost everything is plastic. Case contact is highly audible with built-in mics, so you need an isolated shock mount etc if you're going to be moving around. -Built-in mics are non-removable on the X6 and removable on the X8, with 10mm capsules on the X6 and 14mm on the X8. The mics themselves are excellent. The way they're installed into the case is kind of cheap, and if you ever drop this unit onto the mics (or have a hard bump into a wall or something), they will definitely smash into pieces - so you have to be careful. On the X6, the mic wires are directly soldered to the PCB with no connectors. In one sense, it might make them more robust than the X8's connectors which might eventually get some corrosion/wear, but replacing mics on the X6 would be troublesome. Still completely possible though, if TEAC sells you replacements. Overall: Best audio quality out of the box for the price, loaded with functionality. BT functionality with dongle for remote recording/adjusting, ability to use the unit as an audio interface in Windows/Android/macOS/Linux, true 32-bit recording, decent battery life, ability to power via USB-C (with a 5V/1.5A capable supply, though the unit only used 5V/200-300mA in practice). Convoluted UI (you'll get used to it) and cheap construction are the only drawbacks.
Review: I bought this primarily for asmr it works great and its easy to learn how to use. I highly recommend it

## Features

- Enjoy intuitive app-like controls on the X6, all using the large 2.4-inch touchscreen. Easy-to-use recording, pre-production and postproduction capabilities are just a touch away. *Note: Only use AK-BT1 adapter. This product is not compatible with the AK-BT2 adapter
- Capture using up to 96 kHz, 32-bit float recording
- Record 6 tracks (4 track + 2 mix) simultaneously
- Easy-to-use recording pre-sets: Select from music, podcast, interviews, field recording and 6-track multi-track for the ideal recording setup for your needs
- 2 XLR inputs and dual built-in mics with switchable AB/true-XY patterns

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN | B0BT571JKW |
| Item model number | PORTACAPTURE-X6 |
| Manufacturer | Tascam |
| Product Dimensions | 20.83 x 14.22 x 6.99 cm; 531 g |

## Product Details

- **Brand:** Tascam
- **Compatible devices:** MP3 Player
- **Format:** WAV
- **Hardware interface:** USB 2.0
- **Microphone form factor:** Built-In

## Images

![Portacapture X6 32-bit Float Portable Audio Recorder - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/815ypbNcpUL.jpg)

## Available Options

This product comes in different **Style** options.

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Review
*by N***K on 1 March 2025*

The X8 is just a bit too large and conspicuous for me so I got the X6 because it's more useful in more random situations and easier to carry around. I'm an engineer so I took it apart and examined all the circuitry and general build. My conclusion is that TEAC/Tascam did a pretty fantastic job with the design for this unit. Much of the money you're paying, is going into the circuitry - which is indeed complex and high quality. Very good opamps (OPA1678's, which you can replace with OPA1656's if you like, for a little improvement), great ADCs (AKM AK5704's), high quality dual clocks from Kyushu Dentsu (KDK) - one for 44.1kHz, and another for 48/96kHz. The device runs on a single core Cortex-M7 ARM CPU at 600MHz, and it has 128MB of RAM. All the audio routing and processing is done on an CPLD/FPGA from Lattice which costs twice as much as the CPU. I'm guessing that the reverb functionality is implemented through it as well, effectively "in hardware". The good: -What I haven't see anyone mention - you can run the X6 (and presumably X8 as well) from a USB-C power bank, even without the AA present in the unit. I got an estimate of 60-90 runtime hours from a 25000mAh battery bank. It seems to have good power filtering for USB-C as well, so power noise doesn't couple into the analog circuits much at all. -Excellent circuit design (unit is engineered by TEAC with their extensive experience in audio, they have their high-end "Esoteric" parent brand after all). -Internal shielding is fairly elaborate (thick metal plate between digital and analog portions of the circuit, which keeps self-noise very low. BUT, this device is not as resistant to external interference (plastic case and all). If you place a phone or other electronics next to this device, it will pick up various EMI interference which will be extremely audible especially at high gain. So the upside is that the device is light (unlike heavy chonkers from Sound Devices etc), but you don't have as much external electrical noise immunity. Keep this in mind~ -Sealed dome switches for keys (not membranes) - should last for a long time. -Plastic case is actually pretty high-precision and cleverly designed when it comes to molding. Subtle thing and no one likes plastic anyways, but it's well made at least. -Pleasant noise floor signature (gained up to the max, the noise sounds like brown more than white - it's soft) -Built-in mics are very sensitive with low self-noise for the price of the device -Gimmicks aside ("ASMR" mode etc lol), the device is straightforward to use. UI isn't the best nor the most intuitive but you get used to it quickly. Just accept it and move on lol. -32-bit mode is indeed excellent and captures the entire dynamic range of sounds with its dual ADCs per input, so you can recover peaks in post, or gain up the audio with no drawbacks -I tested this device with a Samsung S24 Ultra and it works fine as an audio interface there. I was able to get MotionCam Pro to use this device as a sound input (only when the X6 is set to 48kHz/32-bit), at which point MotionCam Pro was able to include 32-bit 48kHz uncompressed audio from the X6 into the RAW video files, which is what I wanted. You do have to set the audio profile to "Unprocessed" in MotionCam. I've written my own multi-threaded decoder for their .mcraw files for Linux (.mcraw to DNG+Proxy), so I can now have RAW video + "RAW" (32-bit) audio in single files that are easy to edit, which is pretttyyy coooool as probably a world first. The bad: -The #1 issue to me as an engineer (which I haven't seen anyone bring up before for this device), is in how the device handles its high pass filter (low-cut filter) when it comes to the BUILT-IN mics. This filter is applied digitally (post-preamp, post-ADC), which means that when it comes to wind or loud surrounding bass, the built-in mics will already clip the preamp/ADCs, so you're applying low-cut to a clipped waveform at that point, which will retain all the distortion components from that clipping. This is terrible, and I've seen complaints on Reddit about this device clipping lows in unexpected situations. Many external mics have low-cut filters built into the mics - which is what you want. Low-cut filters should ideally happen in the analog domain, before digitizing. This would've required more parts and board space, so I can see why TEAC/Tascam didn't do that. But - that's how you'd avoid clipping your preamps/ADCs. This device saves money by doing this digitally, but that means that to use this recorder professionally in the field, you have to have phenomenal quality wind filters on it. Cheap stuff won't do, cause you REALLY need to get rid of anything that's gonna clip the lows on those mics (which are unfortunately/fortunately great at capturing low frequencies). -Given that all the money went into the circuitry, you sacrifice overall build quality. Almost everything is plastic. Case contact is highly audible with built-in mics, so you need an isolated shock mount etc if you're going to be moving around. -Built-in mics are non-removable on the X6 and removable on the X8, with 10mm capsules on the X6 and 14mm on the X8. The mics themselves are excellent. The way they're installed into the case is kind of cheap, and if you ever drop this unit onto the mics (or have a hard bump into a wall or something), they will definitely smash into pieces - so you have to be careful. On the X6, the mic wires are directly soldered to the PCB with no connectors. In one sense, it might make them more robust than the X8's connectors which might eventually get some corrosion/wear, but replacing mics on the X6 would be troublesome. Still completely possible though, if TEAC sells you replacements. Overall: Best audio quality out of the box for the price, loaded with functionality. BT functionality with dongle for remote recording/adjusting, ability to use the unit as an audio interface in Windows/Android/macOS/Linux, true 32-bit recording, decent battery life, ability to power via USB-C (with a 5V/1.5A capable supply, though the unit only used 5V/200-300mA in practice). Convoluted UI (you'll get used to it) and cheap construction are the only drawbacks.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Review
*by B***E on 23 July 2025*

I bought this primarily for asmr it works great and its easy to learn how to use. I highly recommend it

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Review
*by A***E on 11 February 2026*

GENIAL!

## Frequently Bought Together

- TASCAM Portacapture X6 32-bit Float Portable Audio Recorder, Field Recorder for Video, Music, Podcast, Voice, Podcasting
- co2CREA Hard Case compatible with TASCAM Portacapture X6 32-bit Float Portable Audio Recorder
- SanDisk 256GB Extreme microSDXC UHS-I Memory Card with Adapter - Up to 190MB/s, C10, U3, V30, 4K, 5K, A2, Micro SD Card - SDSQXAV-256G-GN6MA

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*Product available on Desertcart United Kingdom*
*Store origin: GB*
*Last updated: 2026-05-19*