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#1
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Recording cassettes to digital.
Hi
I'm converting old audio cassettes to digital, so far with good results. I'm using Cool Edit Pro and an old Technics deck and the quality is excellent. The one problem I have is that on some of the tapes the gain is higher in the left channel than the right, or vice versa, but when I open Windows recording mixer and move the balance slider of the line in to compensate it has no effect. I can amplify or fade the channels as needed after I record the cassette but this is time consuming and I'd like to be able to set the balance properly before I record. If anyone has any experience with this your help would be much appreciated. Neil. |
#2
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
On Wed, 24 May 2006 21:37:29 +1000, "Neil Green"
wrote: Hi I'm converting old audio cassettes to digital, so far with good results. I'm using Cool Edit Pro and an old Technics deck and the quality is excellent. The one problem I have is that on some of the tapes the gain is higher in the left channel than the right, or vice versa, but when I open Windows recording mixer and move the balance slider of the line in to compensate it has no effect. I can amplify or fade the channels as needed after I record the cassette but this is time consuming and I'd like to be able to set the balance properly before I record. If anyone has any experience with this your help would be much appreciated. Neil. Can you run the cassette signal through a pre-amp that has a balance control before you hit the PC? Alternatively if you are handy with a soldering iron, you can wire a balance control into the wire. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#3
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Neil Green" wrote in message ... Hi I'm converting old audio cassettes to digital, so far with good results. I'm using Cool Edit Pro and an old Technics deck and the quality is excellent. The one problem I have is that on some of the tapes the gain is higher in the left channel than the right, or vice versa, but when I open Windows recording mixer and move the balance slider of the line in to compensate it has no effect. I can amplify or fade the channels as needed after I record the cassette but this is time consuming and I'd like to be able to set the balance properly before I record. If anyone has any experience with this your help would be much appreciated. Neil. No help, but I've experienced exactly the same thing copying tapes from my Nak 3A into my DAW, using Audigy. One channel slightly higher; input balance control in Audigy doesn't seem to work. |
#4
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
On Wed, 24 May 2006 21:37:29 +1000, "Neil Green"
wrote: Hi I'm converting old audio cassettes to digital, so far with good results. I'm using Cool Edit Pro and an old Technics deck and the quality is excellent. The one problem I have is that on some of the tapes the gain is higher in the left channel than the right, or vice versa, but when I open Windows recording mixer and move the balance slider of the line in to compensate it has no effect. I can amplify or fade the channels as needed after I record the cassette but this is time consuming and I'd like to be able to set the balance properly before I record. If anyone has any experience with this your help would be much appreciated. Neil. Get a mixer. The key to quality recording is presenting an optimum level at the computer input. Take control of that. |
#5
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Laurence Payne" lpayne1NOSPAM@dslDOTpipexDOTcom wrote in message ... On Wed, 24 May 2006 21:37:29 +1000, "Neil Green" wrote: Hi I'm converting old audio cassettes to digital, so far with good results. I'm using Cool Edit Pro and an old Technics deck and the quality is excellent. The one problem I have is that on some of the tapes the gain is higher in the left channel than the right, or vice versa, but when I open Windows recording mixer and move the balance slider of the line in to compensate it has no effect. I can amplify or fade the channels as needed after I record the cassette but this is time consuming and I'd like to be able to set the balance properly before I record. If anyone has any experience with this your help would be much appreciated. Neil. Get a mixer. The key to quality recording is presenting an optimum level at the computer input. Take control of that. Thanks for the reply, but the quality doesn't have to be studio. I'm recording audio books for my wife and her friends to play on MP3 players when they're out for a run. I can't run to a mixer for these purposes, and I can balance it out after it's recorded but it's a drag and I thought I should be able to adjust the channels from within Cool Edit. |
#6
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Don Pearce" wrote in message ... On Wed, 24 May 2006 21:37:29 +1000, "Neil Green" wrote: Hi I'm converting old audio cassettes to digital, so far with good results. I'm using Cool Edit Pro and an old Technics deck and the quality is excellent. The one problem I have is that on some of the tapes the gain is higher in the left channel than the right, or vice versa, but when I open Windows recording mixer and move the balance slider of the line in to compensate it has no effect. I can amplify or fade the channels as needed after I record the cassette but this is time consuming and I'd like to be able to set the balance properly before I record. If anyone has any experience with this your help would be much appreciated. Neil. Can you run the cassette signal through a pre-amp that has a balance control before you hit the PC? Alternatively if you are handy with a soldering iron, you can wire a balance control into the wire. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com Hi I don't have access to a preamp and I'm afraid I'd have no idea how to make up an inline balance control. |
#7
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Don Pearce" wrote in message ... On Wed, 24 May 2006 21:37:29 +1000, "Neil Green" wrote: Hi I'm converting old audio cassettes to digital, so far with good results. I'm using Cool Edit Pro and an old Technics deck and the quality is excellent. The one problem I have is that on some of the tapes the gain is higher in the left channel than the right, or vice versa, but when I open Windows recording mixer and move the balance slider of the line in to compensate it has no effect. I can amplify or fade the channels as needed after I record the cassette but this is time consuming and I'd like to be able to set the balance properly before I record. If anyone has any experience with this your help would be much appreciated. Neil. Can you run the cassette signal through a pre-amp that has a balance control before you hit the PC? Alternatively if you are handy with a soldering iron, you can wire a balance control into the wire. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com Hi I don't have access to a preamp and I'd have no idea how to build an inline balance control, although I do have a soldering iron. |
#8
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
On Wed, 24 May 2006 22:09:41 +1000, "Neil Green"
wrote: Get a mixer. The key to quality recording is presenting an optimum level at the computer input. Take control of that. Thanks for the reply, but the quality doesn't have to be studio. I'm recording audio books for my wife and her friends to play on MP3 players when they're out for a run. I can't run to a mixer for these purposes, Have you seen just how cheaply Behringer will sell you a little mixer? You've spent more on cables already! and I can balance it out after it's recorded but it's a drag and I thought I should be able to adjust the channels from within Cool Edit. But not on the way in. Sorry. |
#9
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
On Wed, 24 May 2006 22:13:40 +1000, "Neil Green"
wrote: Can you run the cassette signal through a pre-amp that has a balance control before you hit the PC? Alternatively if you are handy with a soldering iron, you can wire a balance control into the wire. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com Hi I don't have access to a preamp and I'd have no idea how to build an inline balance control, although I do have a soldering iron. Sounds dangerous ;-) It is a bit too complicated to explain here.Do you have no friends who are up on electronics? It would really be quite a simple thing for them to do for you. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#10
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Don Pearce" wrote in message ... On Wed, 24 May 2006 22:13:40 +1000, "Neil Green" wrote: Can you run the cassette signal through a pre-amp that has a balance control before you hit the PC? Alternatively if you are handy with a soldering iron, you can wire a balance control into the wire. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com Hi I don't have access to a preamp and I'd have no idea how to build an inline balance control, although I do have a soldering iron. Sounds dangerous ;-) It is a bit too complicated to explain here.Do you have no friends who are up on electronics? It would really be quite a simple thing for them to do for you. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com I have a rudimentary knowledge of electronics, and no, none of my friends or aquaintances are up to speed either. I would assume a potentiometer and some resistors maybe, but if you could point me to a simple schematic I'll give it a go. |
#11
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Laurence Payne" lpayne1NOSPAM@dslDOTpipexDOTcom wrote in message ... On Wed, 24 May 2006 22:09:41 +1000, "Neil Green" wrote: Get a mixer. The key to quality recording is presenting an optimum level at the computer input. Take control of that. Thanks for the reply, but the quality doesn't have to be studio. I'm recording audio books for my wife and her friends to play on MP3 players when they're out for a run. I can't run to a mixer for these purposes, Have you seen just how cheaply Behringer will sell you a little mixer? You've spent more on cables already! and I can balance it out after it's recorded but it's a drag and I thought I should be able to adjust the channels from within Cool Edit. But not on the way in. Sorry. I'm in Australia and have never heard of Behringer, and the only cable I'm using is a 3.5mm to RCA which I had laying around so it's a zero cost exercise so far. Most of the tapes are OK so it looks like I'll adjust the bad ones after I've recorded them. Thanks for your help. |
#12
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Jeff Findley" wrote in message ... "Neil Green" wrote in message ... Hi I'm converting old audio cassettes to digital, so far with good results. I'm using Cool Edit Pro and an old Technics deck and the quality is excellent. The one problem I have is that on some of the tapes the gain is higher in the left channel than the right, or vice versa, but when I open Windows recording mixer and move the balance slider of the line in to compensate it has no effect. I can amplify or fade the channels as needed after I record the cassette but this is time consuming and I'd like to be able to set the balance properly before I record. If anyone has any experience with this your help would be much appreciated. Can't you fix this after the fact in Cool Edit Pro? Jeff -- "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" - B. Franklin, Bartlett's Familiar Quotations (1919) Yes I can but I thought it would be easier to adjust the balance correctly beforehand. |
#13
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
On Wed, 24 May 2006 22:42:20 +1000, "Neil Green"
wrote: "Don Pearce" wrote in message ... On Wed, 24 May 2006 22:13:40 +1000, "Neil Green" wrote: Can you run the cassette signal through a pre-amp that has a balance control before you hit the PC? Alternatively if you are handy with a soldering iron, you can wire a balance control into the wire. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com Hi I don't have access to a preamp and I'd have no idea how to build an inline balance control, although I do have a soldering iron. Sounds dangerous ;-) It is a bit too complicated to explain here.Do you have no friends who are up on electronics? It would really be quite a simple thing for them to do for you. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com I have a rudimentary knowledge of electronics, and no, none of my friends or aquaintances are up to speed either. I would assume a potentiometer and some resistors maybe, but if you could point me to a simple schematic I'll give it a go. OK - I've posted one. The values of the components are approximate - just use what you have to hand and it will work. http://81.174.169.10 d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#14
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Neil Green" wrote ...
Thanks for the reply, but the quality doesn't have to be studio. I'm recording audio books for my wife and her friends to play on MP3 players when they're out for a run. Record in mono. Why do you even need stereo for audio books? Saves space in the MP3 files, too. |
#15
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Don Pearce" wrote in message
On Wed, 24 May 2006 21:37:29 +1000, "Neil Green" wrote: I'm converting old audio cassettes to digital, so far with good results. I'm using Cool Edit Pro and an old Technics deck and the quality is excellent. The one problem I have is that on some of the tapes the gain is higher in the left channel than the right, or vice versa, but when I open Windows recording mixer and move the balance slider of the line in to compensate it has no effect. I can amplify or fade the channels as needed after I record the cassette but this is time consuming and I'd like to be able to set the balance properly before I record. It shouldn't be all that time consuming. If you want the best possible results, you'll record with peak levels up to 10 dB below FS, and adjust gain for each channel indepdently before burning. If anyone has any experience with this your help would be much appreciated. Neil. I've transcribed 100's of cassettes and LPs by adjusting gain and balance in CEP. |
#16
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Neil Green" wrote in
message u "Jeff Findley" wrote in message ... "Neil Green" wrote in message ... Hi I'm converting old audio cassettes to digital, so far with good results. I'm using Cool Edit Pro and an old Technics deck and the quality is excellent. The one problem I have is that on some of the tapes the gain is higher in the left channel than the right, or vice versa, but when I open Windows recording mixer and move the balance slider of the line in to compensate it has no effect. I can amplify or fade the channels as needed after I record the cassette but this is time consuming and I'd like to be able to set the balance properly before I record. If anyone has any experience with this your help would be much appreciated. Can't you fix this after the fact in Cool Edit Pro? Yes I can but I thought it would be easier to adjust the balance correctly beforehand. Think again. |
#17
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
Correction - eliminate Don's name from a conversation he wasn't involved in. On Wed, 24 May 2006 21:37:29 +1000, "Neil Green" wrote: I'm converting old audio cassettes to digital, so far with good results. I'm using Cool Edit Pro and an old Technics deck and the quality is excellent. The one problem I have is that on some of the tapes the gain is higher in the left channel than the right, or vice versa, but when I open Windows recording mixer and move the balance slider of the line in to compensate it has no effect. I can amplify or fade the channels as needed after I record the cassette but this is time consuming and I'd like to be able to set the balance properly before I record. It shouldn't be all that time consuming. If you want the best possible results, you'll record with peak levels up to 10 dB below FS, and adjust gain for each channel indepdently before burning. If anyone has any experience with this your help would be much appreciated. Neil. I've transcribed 100's of cassettes and LPs by adjusting gain and balance in CEP. |
#18
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Don Pearce" wrote in message ... On Wed, 24 May 2006 22:42:20 +1000, "Neil Green" wrote: "Don Pearce" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 24 May 2006 22:13:40 +1000, "Neil Green" wrote: Can you run the cassette signal through a pre-amp that has a balance control before you hit the PC? Alternatively if you are handy with a soldering iron, you can wire a balance control into the wire. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com Hi I don't have access to a preamp and I'd have no idea how to build an inline balance control, although I do have a soldering iron. Sounds dangerous ;-) It is a bit too complicated to explain here.Do you have no friends who are up on electronics? It would really be quite a simple thing for them to do for you. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com I have a rudimentary knowledge of electronics, and no, none of my friends or aquaintances are up to speed either. I would assume a potentiometer and some resistors maybe, but if you could point me to a simple schematic I'll give it a go. OK - I've posted one. The values of the components are approximate - just use what you have to hand and it will work. http://81.174.169.10 d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com Thanks, I'll see how I go with it but it looks simple enough. |
#19
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Richard Crowley" wrote in message ... "Neil Green" wrote ... Thanks for the reply, but the quality doesn't have to be studio. I'm recording audio books for my wife and her friends to play on MP3 players when they're out for a run. Record in mono. Why do you even need stereo for audio books? Saves space in the MP3 files, too. Wife says stereo sounds better, and who am I to argue? |
#20
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Neil Green" wrote in
message u "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Don Pearce" wrote in message On Wed, 24 May 2006 21:37:29 +1000, "Neil Green" wrote: I'm converting old audio cassettes to digital, so far with good results. I'm using Cool Edit Pro and an old Technics deck and the quality is excellent. The one problem I have is that on some of the tapes the gain is higher in the left channel than the right, or vice versa, but when I open Windows recording mixer and move the balance slider of the line in to compensate it has no effect. I can amplify or fade the channels as needed after I record the cassette but this is time consuming and I'd like to be able to set the balance properly before I record. It shouldn't be all that time consuming. If you want the best possible results, you'll record with peak levels up to 10 dB below FS, and adjust gain for each channel indepdently before burning. If anyone has any experience with this your help would be much appreciated. Neil. I've transcribed 100's of cassettes and LPs by adjusting gain and balance in CEP. I'm having no trouble adjusting the main level, that's why I thought the balance slider should work too, but it doesn't. That's probably due to a problem with the driver for your audio interface. It may be a problem that was designed in. |
#21
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Don Pearce" wrote in message On Wed, 24 May 2006 21:37:29 +1000, "Neil Green" wrote: I'm converting old audio cassettes to digital, so far with good results. I'm using Cool Edit Pro and an old Technics deck and the quality is excellent. The one problem I have is that on some of the tapes the gain is higher in the left channel than the right, or vice versa, but when I open Windows recording mixer and move the balance slider of the line in to compensate it has no effect. I can amplify or fade the channels as needed after I record the cassette but this is time consuming and I'd like to be able to set the balance properly before I record. It shouldn't be all that time consuming. If you want the best possible results, you'll record with peak levels up to 10 dB below FS, and adjust gain for each channel indepdently before burning. If anyone has any experience with this your help would be much appreciated. Neil. I've transcribed 100's of cassettes and LPs by adjusting gain and balance in CEP. I'm having no trouble adjusting the main level, that's why I thought the balance slider should work too, but it doesn't. |
#22
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
On Wed, 24 May 2006 22:46:13 +1000, "Neil Green"
wrote: But not on the way in. Sorry. I'm in Australia and have never heard of Behringer, and the only cable I'm using is a 3.5mm to RCA which I had laying around so it's a zero cost OK. So you've set against the idea of a mixer :-) But I strongly suggest you see what's available. |
#23
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
Neil Green wrote:
Hi I'm converting old audio cassettes to digital, so far with good results. I'm using Cool Edit Pro and an old Technics deck and the quality is excellent. The one problem I have is that on some of the tapes the gain is higher in the left channel than the right, or vice versa, but when I open Windows recording mixer and move the balance slider of the line in to compensate it has no effect. I can amplify or fade the channels as needed after I record the cassette but this is time consuming and I'd like to be able to set the balance properly before I record. If anyone has any experience with this your help would be much appreciated. Neil. Clean the play head for best results. |
#24
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Neil Green" wrote in message u "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Don Pearce" wrote in message On Wed, 24 May 2006 21:37:29 +1000, "Neil Green" wrote: I'm converting old audio cassettes to digital, so far with good results. I'm using Cool Edit Pro and an old Technics deck and the quality is excellent. The one problem I have is that on some of the tapes the gain is higher in the left channel than the right, or vice versa, but when I open Windows recording mixer and move the balance slider of the line in to compensate it has no effect. I can amplify or fade the channels as needed after I record the cassette but this is time consuming and I'd like to be able to set the balance properly before I record. It shouldn't be all that time consuming. If you want the best possible results, you'll record with peak levels up to 10 dB below FS, and adjust gain for each channel indepdently before burning. If anyone has any experience with this your help would be much appreciated. Neil. I've transcribed 100's of cassettes and LPs by adjusting gain and balance in CEP. I'm having no trouble adjusting the main level, that's why I thought the balance slider should work too, but it doesn't. That's probably due to a problem with the driver for your audio interface. It may be a problem that was designed in. Yeah, I have the latest driver for the sound card but still no go. |
#25
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Recording cassettes to digital.
Neil Green wrote:
I'm in Australia and have never heard of Behringer, Example product possibly usable for your purpose: http://www.behringer.com/UB502/index.cfm?lang=ENG Kind regards Peter Larsen -- ******************************************* * My site is at: http://www.muyiovatki.dk * ******************************************* |
#26
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
select each channel (left and right) seperately in cool edit pro and
"normalise" each one seperately. |
#27
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Recording cassettes to digital.
David Nebenzahl wrote:
Pardon me, but why should the guy have to buy a mixer when all he needs is some software which *actually works* Because he wants to do it "on the fly". Kind regards Peter Larsen -- ******************************************* * My site is at: http://www.muyiovatki.dk * ******************************************* |
#28
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
Neil Green wrote:
"Laurence Payne" lpayne1NOSPAM@dslDOTpipexDOTcom wrote in I'm in Australia and have never heard of Behringer, and the only cable I'm using is a 3.5mm to RCA which I had laying around so it's a zero cost exercise so far. Try a musical instrument shop. Many stocked Behringer last time I was in Oz (a few months ago). geoff |
#29
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Recording cassettes to digital.
Laurence Payne spake thus:
On Wed, 24 May 2006 22:46:13 +1000, "Neil Green" wrote: But not on the way in. Sorry. I'm in Australia and have never heard of Behringer, and the only cable I'm using is a 3.5mm to RCA which I had laying around so it's a zero cost OK. So you've set against the idea of a mixer :-) But I strongly suggest you see what's available. Pardon me, but why should the guy have to buy a mixer when all he needs is some software which *actually works* and gives him the ability to set the balance level, like his current software *should* do? Surely if we can put a man on the moon, there's some software out there that will work properly? Probably for free. Sheesh; the default answer on this newsgroup to any question seems to be "spend more money". -- I hope that in a few years it [Wikipedia] will be so bloated that it will simply disintegrate, because I can't stand the thought that this thing might someday actually be used as a serious reference source. Because in its current form, it's not to be taken seriously at all. - Horst Prillinger (see http://homepage.univie.ac.at/horst.p...06/000623.html) |
#30
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Recording cassettes to digital.
Peter Larsen spake thus:
David Nebenzahl wrote: Pardon me, but why should the guy have to buy a mixer when all he needs is some software which *actually works* Because he wants to do it "on the fly". Not sure I get what you're saying. To recap, the O.P. said: The one problem I have is that on some of the tapes the gain is higher in the left channel than the right, or vice versa, but when I open Windows recording mixer and move the balance slider of the line in to compensate it has no effect. So it seems to me that all he really wants and needs is a piece of software--like the Windows mixer he's now using--that would allow him to set the balance level as he transfers each tape. Would this not qualify as "on the fly"? Or maybe I'm missing something here. -- I hope that in a few years it [Wikipedia] will be so bloated that it will simply disintegrate, because I can't stand the thought that this thing might someday actually be used as a serious reference source. Because in its current form, it's not to be taken seriously at all. - Horst Prillinger (see http://homepage.univie.ac.at/horst.p...06/000623.html) |
#31
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Recording cassettes to digital.
Peter Larsen spake thus:
David Nebenzahl wrote: So it seems to me that all he really wants and needs is a piece of software--like the Windows mixer he's now using--that would allow him to set the balance level as he transfers each tape. Would this not qualify as "on the fly"? Or maybe I'm missing something here. Yes you a his soundcard does not permit the required real time adjustment. Do you know that for sure, or is it possible that the Windoze software is broken? (Has been known to have happened, you know.) He didn't tell us what kind of sound card he has, by the way. -- I hope that in a few years it [Wikipedia] will be so bloated that it will simply disintegrate, because I can't stand the thought that this thing might someday actually be used as a serious reference source. Because in its current form, it's not to be taken seriously at all. - Horst Prillinger (see http://homepage.univie.ac.at/horst.p...06/000623.html) |
#32
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Recording cassettes to digital.
Peter Larsen spake thus:
David Nebenzahl wrote: Yes you a his soundcard does not permit the required real time adjustment. Do you know that for sure, or is it possible that the Windoze software is broken? The "windows mixer" is the graphics front end, what it can offer is what the sound card drivers offer. Maybe he needs new sound card drivers then. -- I hope that in a few years it [Wikipedia] will be so bloated that it will simply disintegrate, because I can't stand the thought that this thing might someday actually be used as a serious reference source. Because in its current form, it's not to be taken seriously at all. - Horst Prillinger (see http://homepage.univie.ac.at/horst.p...06/000623.html) |
#33
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Peter Larsen" wrote in message ... Neil Green wrote: I'm in Australia and have never heard of Behringer, Example product possibly usable for your purpose: http://www.behringer.com/UB502/index.cfm?lang=ENG Kind regards Peter Larsen -- ******************************************* * My site is at: http://www.muyiovatki.dk * ******************************************* OK, but at $70 AUD plus shipping I'll probably just balance it out in Cool Edit after the tapes are recorded. It seems that either my sound card (Onboard 5.1) or the drivers aren't up to the task, although I have installed the latest drivers which are only a week old. |
#34
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"setvice" wrote in message oups.com... select each channel (left and right) seperately in cool edit pro and "normalise" each one seperately. That's what I'm doing, but it seemed to be unnecessary if I could adjust the balance before I recorded the cassettes. It looks like I'll either live with it or build a simple inline balance control as outlined in another post above. I'll go to the parts shop on the weekend and if the parts are reasonable then I'll put the balance control together. |
#35
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Tom Aurand" wrote in message ... Neil Green wrote: Hi I'm converting old audio cassettes to digital, so far with good results. I'm using Cool Edit Pro and an old Technics deck and the quality is excellent. The one problem I have is that on some of the tapes the gain is higher in the left channel than the right, or vice versa, but when I open Windows recording mixer and move the balance slider of the line in to compensate it has no effect. I can amplify or fade the channels as needed after I record the cassette but this is time consuming and I'd like to be able to set the balance properly before I record. If anyone has any experience with this your help would be much appreciated. Neil. Clean the play head for best results. Thanks Tom, yes I've done that. The balance varies depending on the cassette (Most of which are fairly well used), some times higher in the left, sometimes the right, mostly OK between both, so it's not an issue of dirty play heads. The sound quality is excellent, just the balance control that needs sorting out. |
#36
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
Neil Green spake thus:
"Peter Larsen" wrote in message ... Neil Green wrote: I'm in Australia and have never heard of Behringer, Example product possibly usable for your purpose: http://www.behringer.com/UB502/index.cfm?lang=ENG OK, but at $70 AUD plus shipping I'll probably just balance it out in Cool Edit after the tapes are recorded. It seems that either my sound card (Onboard 5.1) or the drivers aren't up to the task, although I have installed the latest drivers which are only a week old. Since this seems to be a driver deficiency of some sort, I'm wondering if there's a utility for the sound card you can use to adjust levels apart from the Micro$oft utility. I've got a Sound Blaster which comes with its own little control panel. Is there something like that on your system? Is the sound card built into the motherboard? -- I hope that in a few years it [Wikipedia] will be so bloated that it will simply disintegrate, because I can't stand the thought that this thing might someday actually be used as a serious reference source. Because in its current form, it's not to be taken seriously at all. - Horst Prillinger (see http://homepage.univie.ac.at/horst.p...06/000623.html) |
#37
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"David Nebenzahl" wrote in message .com... Neil Green spake thus: "Peter Larsen" wrote in message ... Neil Green wrote: I'm in Australia and have never heard of Behringer, Example product possibly usable for your purpose: http://www.behringer.com/UB502/index.cfm?lang=ENG OK, but at $70 AUD plus shipping I'll probably just balance it out in Cool Edit after the tapes are recorded. It seems that either my sound card (Onboard 5.1) or the drivers aren't up to the task, although I have installed the latest drivers which are only a week old. Since this seems to be a driver deficiency of some sort, I'm wondering if there's a utility for the sound card you can use to adjust levels apart from the Micro$oft utility. I've got a Sound Blaster which comes with its own little control panel. Is there something like that on your system? Is the sound card built into the motherboard? Yes it is, and there doesn't seem to be any utility to adjust recording levels. There's an equalizer and utilities to setup surround sound and other stuff but nothing to over ride the Windows recording mixer. I could install a PCI card but you know what it's like with PC's and cash. It seems that whatever you throw at them they always need more. I don't have a card laying around so I'd have to buy one with no guarantee it would do what I want. I thought of a different mixer to bypass the Windows one but the Windows mixer is used by Cool Edit within the program and I'm not sure how to ask it to use another one, and I can't find any plugins for Cool Edit on the net. So it seems that the best way to go is to build a simple inline balance control. -- I hope that in a few years it [Wikipedia] will be so bloated that it will simply disintegrate, because I can't stand the thought that this thing might someday actually be used as a serious reference source. Because in its current form, it's not to be taken seriously at all. - Horst Prillinger (see http://homepage.univie.ac.at/horst.p...06/000623.html) |
#38
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"Peter Larsen" wrote in message ... Neil Green wrote: I thought of a different mixer to bypass the Windows one but the Windows mixer is used by Cool Edit within the program The "windows mixer" IS the sound cards mixer with a windows standardized appeareance. Kind regards Peter Larsen -- ******************************************* * My site is at: http://www.muyiovatki.dk * ******************************************* Thanks Peter, I wasn't aware of that. So I either have to buy a soundcard which may or may not work, a mixer, build an inline balance control or do what I'm doing now and adjust the balance with Cool Edit after recording . I think I'll try the inline balance, it'll be cheap to build and if it doesn't work I've lost very little.(And it'll give me something to do this weekend) Audio books for my wife and her friends don't really justify the expense of a mixer and the onboard sound card is OK for everything else apart from the recording balance so I don't feel like buying a new soun card which isn't guaranteed to work. Thanks again for your help and suggestions. Neil. |
#39
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
"David Nebenzahl" wrote in message
.com Peter Larsen spake thus: David Nebenzahl wrote: Yes you a his soundcard does not permit the required real time adjustment. Do you know that for sure, or is it possible that the Windoze software is broken? The "windows mixer" is the graphics front end, what it can offer is what the sound card drivers offer. Maybe he needs new sound card drivers then. The hardware that the drivers operate may not have implemented the feature. |
#40
Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Recording cassettes to digital.
Arny Krueger wrote: "David Nebenzahl" wrote in message .com Peter Larsen spake thus: David Nebenzahl wrote: Yes you a his soundcard does not permit the required real time adjustment. Do you know that for sure, or is it possible that the Windoze software is broken? The "windows mixer" is the graphics front end, what it can offer is what the sound card drivers offer. Maybe he needs new sound card drivers then. The hardware that the drivers operate may not have implemented the feature. I found that a sound card driver update suddenly made the digital optical out work ( that hadn't up til then ). The new mixer also had added features like 4 ch ( again making the software support the actual hardware properly ). Graham |
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