J
jelson
New member
Hi everyone,
Found this forum while doing research on audio interfaces. First, thanks for all the noob stickies and articles. They've been quite educational.
A small non-profit has asked me to help them get started on digitizing their collection of lectures recorded on cassette tapes. I've estimated there's somewhere around 500+ aging cassettes: Some date back to 1990.
All were mono-recordings made on a consumer-grade cassette recording with an external microphone placed in front of the person speaking. (There are also questions from the audience, but naturally they are hard to clearly hear.)
Hardware I have to work with so far:
I've already ran a couple of experiments recording with Audacity after adjusting the input levels via Win7 audio controls:
Key considerations:
My questions:
1). From what I've read here and elsewhere, 16-bit 44.1 KHz appears way more than sufficient for a lecture recording. There's no need for overkill, so what would be the hardware solution for achieving the best, reasonable digitization?
2). I've already experimented with Audacity and have already downloaded Kristal AudioEngine and Reaper. Given the considerations I've listed, what your recommendation for the software solution?
3). Since it isn't a common concern, any specific guidance on making the audience questions clearly? (Been suspecting the answer might be compression.)
4). After finishing post-processing, I'll need to archive the lectures for long-term storage. I've been thinking about using FLAC since it's loss-less, becoming more and more standard, and it's half the size of wave files. Suggestions and recommendations?
Sorry for such a long post, but I wanted to try to provide the information I could anticipate you might need. Thanks in advance.
Found this forum while doing research on audio interfaces. First, thanks for all the noob stickies and articles. They've been quite educational.
A small non-profit has asked me to help them get started on digitizing their collection of lectures recorded on cassette tapes. I've estimated there's somewhere around 500+ aging cassettes: Some date back to 1990.
All were mono-recordings made on a consumer-grade cassette recording with an external microphone placed in front of the person speaking. (There are also questions from the audience, but naturally they are hard to clearly hear.)
Hardware I have to work with so far:
- Toshiba laptop running Windows 7 64-bit (AMD Triplecore 1.8 GHz w 4 GB RAM)
- dual cassette deck (consumer-grade, component: Sony TC-WR700) w. 2ch RCA line-out
- Hosa dual RCA to mini-stereo cable
I've already ran a couple of experiments recording with Audacity after adjusting the input levels via Win7 audio controls:
- via inputting into mic jack
- inputting into a Vansonic USB soundcard (cheap speech recognition device sold by Nuance)
Key considerations:
- I'll be setting this project up, overseeing the digitization, and handling the post-digitization process. Since others will be doing the actual digitization, I need to keep keep it simple so it's easy for them to do it right. Also, I'm doing this as a freebie.
- I understand that I'll need to do post-digitization processing to remove tape hiss, line-noise, etc and to make questions from the audience more audible as well as to otherwise clean it up and make it sound as good as possible.
- I'm limited to USB solutions since this laptop lacks Firewire.
- Most of what I've read is geared to people doing home recording of music, but I'm just looking at speech. I've been looking at hardware solutions ranging from the Behringer UCA202 up to the Tascam US-144mkII.
My questions:
1). From what I've read here and elsewhere, 16-bit 44.1 KHz appears way more than sufficient for a lecture recording. There's no need for overkill, so what would be the hardware solution for achieving the best, reasonable digitization?
2). I've already experimented with Audacity and have already downloaded Kristal AudioEngine and Reaper. Given the considerations I've listed, what your recommendation for the software solution?
3). Since it isn't a common concern, any specific guidance on making the audience questions clearly? (Been suspecting the answer might be compression.)
4). After finishing post-processing, I'll need to archive the lectures for long-term storage. I've been thinking about using FLAC since it's loss-less, becoming more and more standard, and it's half the size of wave files. Suggestions and recommendations?
Sorry for such a long post, but I wanted to try to provide the information I could anticipate you might need. Thanks in advance.