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Easy peasy lemon squeezy digitalization achieved! |
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AGiLiT
Regular Joined: 21 Feb 2017 Location: Houston, TX Status: Offline Points: 45 |
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Posted: 19 Mar 2017 at 5:25pm |
As mentioned elsewhere in the forums, I have only recently put a mothballed turntable back into service with the goal of finally being able to rediscover my youth, which has been packed away in cartons and cartons of vinyl sitting in a closet for 20 years, and to digitize some favorites for portability. I just wanted to share my success story in getting my first LP from vinyl to the cloud.
My first challenge was the need for a phono pre-amp. I have been swapping between a Gram Amp 2 SE on loan from the US Loaner program and an old Hagerman Technology Ripper an audiophile friend of mine lent me to get me started. Boy, I'm liking the Gram Amp 2 SE! Evaluating the various pathways to get from analog to digital, with cost, convenience, and quality all as factors in the decision, I looked at:
I bought a TASCAM CD-RW900MKII - a step up from a consumer grade unit, but still quite affordable. I'm taking analog out from my receiver into the CD/RW recorder. That way, I don't have to unplug and replug my turntable when I want to record. There is a meter on the unit displaying the input / playback levels, and the input signal levels are adjustable so it's easy to set levels before recording. Pop in a CD/RW disc; start recording; drop the needle; pause the recording to flip the album when side one finishes; restart; stop when album completes; finalize the disc and take it to the computer. This produces two tracks: one per side of the album. Using Audacity software, which is free, it was quick and easy to trim out unwanted lead-in and run-out bits off the front and tail of the recordings, find the track separations, label the tracks, remove a couple of minor pops, and export to .mp3. It will also do FLAC, which I will use if there is anything I want to archive, but since my goal is portability, .mp3 gives a nicer file size and the quality is just fine listening over Google Play Music from the cloud or transferred to a microSD card and inserted into a phone. I'm sure I'll have things to learn to deal with special situations, but this is looking like a very manageable, efficient, and effective workflow with results that meet or exceed my expectations. ...and so the journey begins! |
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Tony
Houston, TX |
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