Home Recording

Go Back   Home Recording > General Discussions > Newbies


        

                                
                                10/30 - [video] Demo Roland TD-20SX
Reply    Audiofanzine Homestudio Homestudio News Homestudio Medias Homestudio Tests Homestudio Articles Homestudio User Reviews Homestudio Classifieds Ads
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 07-02-2009
shrdlu shrdlu is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 2
Rep Power: 0
shrdlu is on a distinguished road
What software should I use

I have a turntable plugged into a receiver/tuner. A splitter (2 RCAs to a 3.5mm phone plug) coming out to IN (blue) port on computer sound card.

Am using open source Audacity software and am chosing "line in" as recording source.

Would this give me STEREO? Vinyl originals are all in stereo. Also, which is the richest sound available? wav? I don't want MP3. Is there a better than Audacity software available?
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 07-02-2009
Massive Master's Avatar
Massive Master Massive Master is offline
MASSIVE Mastering, LLC
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Chicago area, probably looking for more coffee.
Age: 42
Posts: 5,390
Rep Power: 1302206
Massive Master has a reputation beyond reputeMassive Master has a reputation beyond reputeMassive Master has a reputation beyond reputeMassive Master has a reputation beyond reputeMassive Master has a reputation beyond reputeMassive Master has a reputation beyond reputeMassive Master has a reputation beyond reputeMassive Master has a reputation beyond reputeMassive Master has a reputation beyond reputeMassive Master has a reputation beyond reputeMassive Master has a reputation beyond repute
You'll need a phono preamp in-line unless you're trying to use the preamp in the receiver, in which case you'd need to pull some sort of tape-out or what not...

The cartridge alone isn't going to give you nearly the voltage you'll need to get it into a line-level input.

The "stereo" part is easy as long as you're using discrete connections.
__________________
John Scrip - MASSIVE Mastering


Spoon-feed a newbie the answer and he'll mix for a day --
Spark his curiosity to find the answer himself and he'll mix for a lifetime...
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 07-02-2009
shrdlu shrdlu is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 2
Rep Power: 0
shrdlu is on a distinguished road
Audacity or something else?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Massive Master View Post
You'll need a phono preamp in-line unless you're trying to use the preamp in the receiver, in which case you'd need to pull some sort of tape-out or what not...

The cartridge alone isn't going to give you nearly the voltage you'll need to get it into a line-level input.

The "stereo" part is easy as long as you're using discrete connections.

Amping phono signal is not a problem. Sony stereo receiver/tuner has numerous in and out ports and feeds two sets of speakers. My questions are, 1) will a stereo splitter (with RCAs coming off AUX from the Sony and a 3.5mm phone plug as the line-in to the sound card) provide satisfactory S-T-E-R-E-O feed to the HD. 2) is Audacity right for the job or is other software recommended?
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 07-02-2009
Farview's Avatar
Farview Farview is offline
www.farviewrecording.com
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: St. Charles (chicago) Illinois
Age: 43
Posts: 9,843
Rep Power: 1344336
Farview has a reputation beyond reputeFarview has a reputation beyond reputeFarview has a reputation beyond reputeFarview has a reputation beyond reputeFarview has a reputation beyond reputeFarview has a reputation beyond reputeFarview has a reputation beyond reputeFarview has a reputation beyond reputeFarview has a reputation beyond reputeFarview has a reputation beyond reputeFarview has a reputation beyond repute
As long as the Y cable (splitter) is trs, and the input on your soundcard is stereo, then you will get stereo.

Trs looks like a headphone plug with two (black normally) rings on the plug.

Most stock soundcards have two inputs, one for a microphone, which is mono, and one for a line input, which is stereo. As long as you are plugged into the line input, you should get stereo.


Audacity is fine for what you are doing. Just mix it into a stereo wav file at 44.1k/16bit and you will be good to go.

Reaper is also good.
__________________
Jay Walsh
Farview Recording - And check out Farview's Rock Drum samples for Drumagog and now in .WAV format!!!
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 07-02-2009
gcapel's Avatar
gcapel gcapel is offline
boom box recordings
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: 90% of your brain
Age: 31
Posts: 1,091
Rep Power: 523312
gcapel has a reputation beyond reputegcapel has a reputation beyond reputegcapel has a reputation beyond reputegcapel has a reputation beyond reputegcapel has a reputation beyond reputegcapel has a reputation beyond reputegcapel has a reputation beyond reputegcapel has a reputation beyond reputegcapel has a reputation beyond reputegcapel has a reputation beyond reputegcapel has a reputation beyond repute
No matter what software you use you will have to setup the track to be either mono or stereo. If it is indeed a stereo input then it should show up as such when stereo is selected.


I still think you may have some level issues as massive explained. If your going to be doing this much at all I would invest in a small interface. You could find something used less than $200.00

Sony Soundforge is a good program to use for what you are doing. It has some tools for dealing with your type of app.
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 07-03-2009
hardwire666's Avatar
hardwire666 hardwire666 is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: In a van DOWN BY THE RIVER!
Posts: 110
Rep Power: 19489
hardwire666 has a reputation beyond reputehardwire666 has a reputation beyond reputehardwire666 has a reputation beyond reputehardwire666 has a reputation beyond reputehardwire666 has a reputation beyond reputehardwire666 has a reputation beyond reputehardwire666 has a reputation beyond reputehardwire666 has a reputation beyond reputehardwire666 has a reputation beyond reputehardwire666 has a reputation beyond reputehardwire666 has a reputation beyond repute
Depending on what you are trying to achieve i have two options for software.

If you are creating music, then I suggest reaper. Can be found here=> http://www.reaper.fm

If you are just trying to archive your vinyl collection the try Goldwave that can be found here==> http://www.goldwave.com/

Even if you are just converting your vinyl so you don't wear them out. I recommend Reaper as it will work past it's trial period. Gold wave i believe has usage limits. Not sure I never use for more than converting a .wav to MP3.

Also, if you are just converting your vinyl. try using a high bit rate mp3 like 320kbs, or VBR (variable bit rate). Every MP3 I have I ripped a 320kbps, and it is flawless. VBR in theory will be just as good but take up less space, as it just removes the bits in places where it's not being used, and essentially bloating the file. I never have messed with creating a VBR mp3 out of laziness, and always just go for the 320kbps.

In the end though the best you can get is .wav format recorded at 24bit/192k.... or 96k i think.... Not sure what the standard is for audio in but I know 192 out is common. Any way if you can, or claim you can hear the difference between 16bit/44.1 you are either cooler than superman, or a crazy person who needs to be locked away.

Hope this helps some.
Reply With Quote
Reply



Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump
Google
 

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Software to software recording rerion Digital Recording & Computers 7 11-10-2005 10:27
Software? red_rabbit DJ & Hip Hop Production 8 04-06-2005 06:03
Software Synth or Software Sampler? alonso Digital Recording & Computers 8 07-12-2002 14:28
syncing a sequencing software to recording software jdechant Digital Recording & Computers 5 04-16-2002 13:03
Digi 001 software of Aardvark Q10 software?? berkleywoods Digital Recording & Computers 11 12-25-2001 19:34


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 22:16.


Powered by: vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 1995-2008 Audiofanzine except where noted. All Rights Reserved.