1. A cassette player of good quality helps reduce noise. A portable works OK but you will not have as good audio quality.
2. RCA to Mini Plug Cable. This will connect between your cassette player and the audio "Line-In" on your PC.
3. A software program like Sound Forge (Free download) that can do Hiss and Noise cleanup.
And CD Burning Software like Nero or similar.
You might also consider that the CD Burning programs have noise reduction applications included. I have used "CD Spin Doctor" by Adaptec with good success, however this is no longer available and the "Easy CD Creator" software is now part of either Nero or Roxio.
2006-11-11 01:07:00
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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I use an RCA CDRW 140. I've had it a couple of years, so this unit may have been replaced by a newer model. You can hook up any cassette deck and transfer cassettes to CD. It is a dual deck unit that will also allow you to copy CDs at 4x speed. It has built in noise reduction and manual controls to customize the sound to your preferences. When I purchased mine it was around $200. It has been worth every penny.
2006-11-11 00:58:48
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answer #2
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answered by kidd 4
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Yes--I have performed it with my "rack installed" containing a turntable, cd participant, cassette participant and likewise a Phillips cd burner. By hooking into the burner, gambling the tune from any tune medium, LP, cassette or an additional CD and recording it by way of the burner, it may be performed. It's only a soreness to finalize the cd, it is the one side I have not mastered but!
2016-09-01 10:45:57
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answer #3
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answered by welcome 4
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