could anyone tell how to get the best quality when i rip vinyl please (programs etc)
Much obliged
Much obliged
Audacity is free Benny
Audacity: Free Audio Editor and Recorder
But also download the MP3 plugins (also free) otherwise you can only save in WAV (which as you wan't best quality rips you may wanna do anyway).
Otherwise it's all about making sure the gains & eqs are leveled correctly (I'm shit at this as my setup thru a mic input means I have to have my lappy & upfaders settings real real low & any tweak can blow the levels... in fact I may get an external usb soundcard to address).
Clean the tune & wipe the needles before hitting record
Do lots of testing first to find the best levels n all
He is comming over to the darkside
He is comming over to the darkside
I've just started to rip all my vinyl to WAV and have found when using Audacity that the tracks lose a bit of bass detail, is there any way of improving this other than EQing each track before I record it?
Why ya want to rip vinyl? lol
Figured it out. I had the EQ knob all the way off on my mixer. DOH...
I can't believe I'm admitting this...
While I'm on here... before getting Traktor Scratch I was recording in Audacity / Sound Forge using a double phono to mini jack into the MIC input on my lappy (all recent lappy's I've had have only had headfones / mic rather than a dedicated line in - boo).
I've had the mic boost clicked off & even so I had to have the upfaders barely up (around 1) & the levels in sound managers barely on too...
Same applied when I was mixing on tinty radio... which meant I had to mix in the cans (which was a fucker for judging levels & x fade curve).
Bizarely running / recording / ripping thru Traktor Scratch Pro I can have me upfaders up as normal allowing me to mix 'open'.
No idea why the difference but I am mightily chuffed.
Couldn't you have just had the master output very low and use the upfaders as per the norm?