I have a PT-649D dual-tape audio cassette player that can also record things onto a tape. However when I played a record while recording the song on a never used blank tape (Maxwell XLII) the results were "choppy" and unclear (not like it should be, even as the music is supposed to be a lower quality when you copy it), is there any way I can record it so the sound is better without buying a turntable specifically made for that purpose?
2007-05-30
17:15:58
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4 answers
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asked by
Peter C
2
in
Consumer Electronics
➔ Music & Music Players
Tvguy, your solution makes sense because the VU is always in the red, but how do you do what you are trying to do?
2007-05-30
17:35:22 ·
update #1
The problem may be the cassette recorder not the player.
Make sure the recording head is clean and also make sure to adjust the recording volume to match the player's input
(if you player has a VU meter, make sure it is not in the "red" area), otherwise the audio will be distorted.
Try recording a song with various level of audio input and see what works the best.
2007-05-30 17:31:08
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answer #1
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answered by TV guy 7
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you should basically do it at abode off your Mac or laptop. All you would be wanting is a cassette deck, the basically terrific cables, and the basically terrific application. There are limitless application strategies, finding on no rely in the experience that your OS is abode homestead windows or Mac OSX (sorry, i do now no longer comprehend which you make the main of). carry out a sprint Google artwork with key words: 'Analog conversion to digital', 'previous vinyl', 'previous cassettes to digital', 'previous cassettes to mp3', and so on. There are a minimum of 6-7 training obtainable. PlusDeck2C isn't too undesirable. some are unfastened, some are no longer from now on. the situation-unfastened technique is an identical: you play the tape, and your laptop converts it (in relatively time) into an AIFF or WAV record (a relatively large record). then you definately relatively drag this into e.g. iTunes, and convert it into an mp3 (in case you're an iPod guy or woman) OR burn the AIFF/WAV directly to disc with, e.g. Toast or Nero, to make a playable CD. information FROM journey: a. Your first few tries may be disappointing. there may be audible tape hiss indoors the history; or the recording, even after being EQed, ought to inspite of the shown fact that sound 'tinny'. basically play around with rather some threshold settings indoors the applying - the extra beneficial you are attempting, the extra beneficial sensible the outcomes get. b. some apps grant an audible 'click' on the genuine of the AIFF or WAV record generated; any stable sound editor can do away with that on the mp3 degree (i take great element approximately MP3 Trimmer, very precise.) c. If there is important 'tape warp' manifested via employing 'whistling' on the carried out tips, it rather is carefully almost a lost reason to generate 'sparkling' mp3s. keep your self the situation and easily purchase the album on CD. such as you, I own some cassettes that are previous - 10 years plus, and a few can not be saved. yet (stable tips) I as at as quickly as as converted a song off a tape that replaced into 21 years previous - and not employing a hitch! in case you do now no longer choose the situation of doing it your self, your Google seek for (above) will come approximately a large type of centers (in case you're uk / US-based) which will try this for a value. i think of of, for basically a handful of cassettes, it rather isn't nicely worth it - have a bypass at doing it your self; the main significant you are able to wish to purchase is the cable and the jack. basically right of success!
2016-11-23 20:28:07
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answer #2
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answered by whitehouse 3
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The SL200 , Technics? would work, can get at a Salvation Army for $50 or eBay for +-$100, I would go Reel to Reel , the cassette movement parts is most likely cause of chop, or it needs cleaning. DAT will also work, is all kinda old school now, but still fun.
2007-05-30 17:29:00
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Put your tape recorder next to your turntable speaker in a quiet room and record away. It ain't high tech, it won't be a crystal clear recording, but it's how we did it back in the day.
2007-05-30 17:30:29
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answer #4
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answered by lmn78744 7
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