Al ears
Well-known member
And that helps the OP??Ive been looking at CD recorders wish i had kept mine now .
And that helps the OP??Ive been looking at CD recorders wish i had kept mine now .
Nope.I've never done it, but I'd think all you need is a sound card (with inputs, which used to be common) and a phono pre-amp. And the aforementioned time; but as someone who still buys and rips CDs, I don't see that as a problem.
And that helps the OP??
its a a much easier way to record/rip records is it not ?And that helps the OP??
CDs yes, records not.....its a a much easier way to record/rip records is it not ?
The line input on the laptop is analogue which connects to the ADC built into the laptop, so no external converter is required.Nope.
He has to get a digital signal out of the turntable does he not?
The laptop converts analogue line in to digital for the recording software.Precisely how is that going to work? Interested in how you propose he does it.
How does he get analogue to digital?
Waiting in anticipation.
Audacity has a click filter also though I found the results a little variable.In a word “don’t” bother. It takes way too long and then you think you will go and clean up the recording and then there are not enough hours in a day.
If they are records that there is no CD erosion of I can understand the appeal.
All you need to to is connect the phono stage output to your PC and with suitable recording software record it. Project do some phono stages that are meant to filter out some of the pops and crackle. Then there is adding the meta data tags to the data. And breaking down the sides to tracks.
Have fun. I did not.
That was the case with the ones I bothered with.If they are records that there is no CD version of I can understand the appeal.