First you need to connect a tape player to your sound card audio input.
Then you need to capture the music and save it as a wav or mp3 file. You could use a program like Windows Sound Recorder, at a push.
Finally you can record (Burn) the tracks to CD using media software such as Windows Media Player or Roxio Media Suite. (Do not use re-writable disks, they won't play on a normal player)
If you want to do lots of music & movies etc. it is a must to buy media software.
2007-04-25 10:02:28
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answer #1
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answered by Ron S 5
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you will need a cd player that plays tapes too. then you will need to buy some blank cd's, either R, or RW (writable, or re-writable) the R ones can be used once, the RW ones can we re-written over.
put the cd in the player, put the tape in the player and set it to play the tape.
press down play and record, and the music should play out and transfer to the cd at the same time!
please note that while you are transferring the music, you do not have to be quiet, as it will not pick up your sounds!
hope this helps x
2007-04-25 09:56:20
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answer #2
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answered by xhxbananaxx 2
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If there is a headphone socket on your cassette player then it's easy. You will need a cable with a stereo jack plug (3.5mm) at each end. You will also need a recording programme, I use audiograbber which is a free download. Then plug the cable into the headphone socket on the tape, and the line in socket behind your computer. Start Audograbber and under file select line in sampling. Start off with the tape volume fairly low and adjust till the recording levels are OK just to test. Then simply record to your computer. If you wish to convert to MP3 you will need an encoder, the instructions for downloading this are in Audiograbber. Hope this helps
2007-04-26 02:27:35
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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The first answer is silly, no Hi-Fi's record Tape to CD, and here's why, the quality of Tape, is CRAP!
I know it's hard to take, I have like 500 tapes, but it's MUCH MUCH MUCH easier to just download them. They'll be higher quality. I've downloaded every track I ever had on tape, took less than 6 months. Get broadband if you don't already have it.
2007-04-25 10:05:14
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answer #4
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answered by GuitarGod2B 1
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you're able to desire to bypass out from the tape deck/ phonograph with RCA jacks (or stereo headphone jack) into the line in of your computing gadget. as quickly as this is connected, you ought to use homestead windows sound recorder, or use a application like soundforge or wavlab to checklist the audio in. keep it as a wave document, or perhaps with each and everything is carried out, burn away.
2016-11-27 20:23:42
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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You'll need a GOOD sound card like this one - http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage.jsp;jsessionid=5FLV33AJOENFLKC4D3HFAGY?_dyncharset=ISO-8859-1&id=pcat17071&type=page&st=audigy+se&sc=Global&cp=1&nrp=15&sp=&qp=&list=n&iht=y&usc=All+Categories&ks=960 /Audity se at best buy ..http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20070415033202AA9a14C&r=w&pa=FZptHWf.BGRX3OFMhjJTU2XRrTqEGVcuTM.nOBbJkeyRi7PjzQ--&paid=answered#NbUvWzq4VjNjshEhdC9O /atape/Vynal to PC
2007-04-25 10:57:55
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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blazeaudio.com
2007-04-25 09:57:26
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answer #7
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answered by Radar 3
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