[ale] vinyl records

Scott Castaline skotchman at gmail.com
Tue Oct 4 12:03:39 EDT 2011


In most cases you will need to use a preamp for the turntable and then 
RCA to 3.5mm (stereo)plug to line-in on your audio card. I've seen where 
Audacity has some available click & pop removal plug-ins, but I believe 
it was for the Winblow$ version at the time.
On 10/04/2011 11:14 AM, Ron Frazier wrote:
> HI Geoffrey,
>
> That's interesting info to know.  I can imagine the "younglings" in our
> readership saying isn't a turntable what you put a car on at an auto
> show, and isn't vinyl what the seats are made of?
>
> It's kind of amusing (in a bad way) that some vinyl records have better
> longevity than some DIY CD's and DVD's.  Organic Dye failures and all that.
>
> I still have a decent Technics turntable that I bought from Best Buy or
> Hi Fi Buys years ago just because it was clear that they were
> disappearing.  This comment won't apply to anyone without a turntable.
> I haven't given this any thought previously, but couldn't I simply get
> an adapter cord at Radio Shack and plug the output of the turntable into
> the mic input of the computer and run some capture software on it?
> Could I do the same thing with cassette tapes?
>
> Just out of curiosity, what audio file format do you use for
> conversion?  What kind of compression do you get?  I've got about 60
> CD's I captured to 56 KBps MP3 years ago.  I can actually hear the
> compression artifacts in them if I listen closely.  Some I've converted
> to 128 KBps.  That's much better.  I've thought about bumping them up to
> 256 or 320 (I think that's the max).  Of course, you lose compression
> and increase size when you bump that up.  If you're trying to stuff 600
> songs on a portable MP3 player, that can become an issue.  According to
> the technical podcasts I listen to, apparently most people cannot hear
> the difference between a CD and a 192 KBps MP3.  I know OGG is also an
> option, but I don't know much about it.  My Sansa Fuze+ player can play OGG.
>
> Sincerely,
>
> Ron
>
> On 10/4/2011 8:33 AM, Geoffrey Myers wrote:
>> I still have my old Kenwood turntable.  I've got 400+ vinyls.  For those
>> that I can find either cd or other digital technology, I've figured it
>> was worth my time to simply repurchase them in the new format.  I do
>> have a good number of albums from small local bands that never made it
>> beyond the vinyl.  Those I am in the process of converting.
>>
>> The usb turntables I've seen have not gotten very good reviews.
>>



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