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My aunt has a lot of old 45 records and she wants to put them on a cd (we can't find them in the store) how do you go about doing that from your computer?

2007-01-05 15:11:07 · 2 answers · asked by robver@sbcglobal.net 1 in Consumer Electronics Music & Music Players

2 answers

If your audio card has an input stereo mini-jack (most do) and you have a turntable that you can connect to a receiver:

1. Purchase an RCA stereo to stereo mini-jack connector (Radio Shack or other electronics store)
2. Hook the RCA jack side to the tape out jacks on your receiver
3. Hook the mini-jack side to the input jacks on your audio card
4. Turn on your turntable and set the receiver to phono input
5. Fire up Windows Sound Recorder (many commercially available packages, like Adobe Audition, are far better alternatives, but will set you back $100 or so).
6. Drop the needle on the phonograph and click on the record button on Sound Recorder at the same time
7. Hit the Stop button on Sound Recorder when the song is finished and save your wav file
8. Repeat

Couple of notes. First, you may need to use Volume Control to modify the recording level so you get the "right" sound levels on your recording (not too low, not too high). Second, there are manufacturers (like Sony) that offer turntables with high output capabilities that would allow you to bypass the receiver and hook the turntable directly to the adapter you purchased for step 1. Third, if there are more than a couple records and the recordings are worth it, spring for better audio recording software. Audition (and others) offer numerous editing, noise reduction, equalization, and normalization tools to improve on the crackly stuff that's likely to come off those old 45s!

2007-01-05 15:27:29 · answer #1 · answered by Rip 3 · 0 0

frequently, musicians attempt to adhere to a topic even as figuring out on songs that they could have written and/or recorded for a record or cd. If performed good, this makes the record a extra cohesive, extra relaxing record. a good number of those extra songs do merely not fit in with something of the album, or are literally not felt to be very strong, and, quite frankly, a good number of cases if a musician or a band feels that a track isn't very strong, they could quite it in no way see the basic of day, a lot less be on an album the position they ought to placed out their perfect fabric or their recording settlement might want to very well be at risk. wish this allows.

2016-12-01 21:43:33 · answer #2 · answered by lemmer 4 · 0 0

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