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I have a whole of cassette music tapes, but my car has a CD player only and I really like too listen to music in my car.

2007-07-22 06:24:55 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Consumer Electronics Other - Electronics

5 answers

I have done this. Most computers can do it. Open up your CD burning software and follow the instructions. You will probably record on the computer first, and then onto the cd. You will need a 3.2 mm stereo plug and a cable going to 2 RCA plugs. Plug the RCA plugs into the tape deck "out" and the 3.2 mm into the "line in" on the computer. Make a file and play your tapes. Record on the computer. When done, open the cd burner and copy the files and burn the disc. You will need to "finalize" the disc when done so it will work in your car cd player.

2007-07-22 06:58:14 · answer #1 · answered by RB 7 · 0 0

Sure can. I've seen cassette-to-CD burners that your can buy, but I can't find any on Amazon, so you could try searching eBay. Amazon has a DVD called "Your Music To CD - Transfer Those Old Vinyls and Cassettes" that, judging my the name, should be what you need.

2007-07-22 06:33:35 · answer #2 · answered by Sailor Jupiter 4 · 0 0

Yes you can but unfortunatially not directly you can get a tape deck that you can either plug in via usb or as a mic into your PC download to your computer and then burn from your computer to a cd
Sometimes it can be complecated but me and some frinds re-wired a co-ax cable to hook up everything from a tape deck to a vinal record player to computers.

2007-07-22 06:30:56 · answer #3 · answered by Derk S 3 · 0 0

there's a software on the industry at WAL-ly international stated as "on the spot music" that works alright. it may convert codecs, checklist sound, and edit recordings. I have been given it to transform old cassettes and Lps to mp3 and wma. it's going to take out lots of the tape hiss and crackle. It takes a splash practice and experimentation nonetheless. It costed practically $30 and got here with some piece of hardware to hook stereo cables to a computer. i did no longer used that. I merely hooked a patch cable between the headphone jack of the stereo and the line in jack on my laptop, then used the appliance. BTW audacity bites!

2016-10-22 08:43:41 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

buy a chord of 3.5 size audio jack on both ends
take a tape recorder\ player which can play cassets and connect one end of the headphone jack to the computers backside line in port and the other end to the headphone jack of the player or the line out whic u can c ,
now connected
so download a line recorder like total recorder and record the played song as the song is been played record them this is the only method as fara asi m concerned

2007-07-22 06:33:15 · answer #5 · answered by Ganesh 4 · 0 0

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