4
45calibermurder
New member
Hello everyone. A friend recommended I visit here to get some ideas and suggestionsabout PC recording. Here is what I am looking to do...
I currently have a Dell 8400 with a Intel Pen. 4 processor @ 3GHZ. I believe I have a gig or DDR ram, etc. etc. The computer should be more than capable of recording. I have a basic soundblaster card that I will be replacing soon.
For recording, I am interested in laying down a track with an acoustic/electric guitar, and 2 vocal tracks. Eventually I will be adding piano, strings, bass, drums, etc. Expandability is important. I don't want to have to replace all my stuff in order to do a little more farther down the road.
I really know very little about all this. I have basic electronics knowledge, maybe a little more than basic, but the PC recording is fairly new to me. So please feel free to offer expanded explainations.
Money is not really an issue. I won't be able to buy everything at once necessarily, but I would rather spend a little more to get a high-quality product that's going to give me more features and last longer.
A friend recommended that I get a Delta 1010LT card and ditch the original one I got. From what I understand, this will allow me to just plug the instruments/mics directly into the inputs on the card, and record the track using something like N-Tracks or Cakewalk. Right?
Now the other option I was told I had is to buy an actual mixer, connect it to my computer, and plug the instruments/mics into the mixer. Right? If this is true, do I still need a program like Cakewalk to record onto the computer? I guess I'm not understanding (if it's true) why I would want to buy a mixer and a program for my pc when I could just do it all on pc...
One other thing that is important is that I am able to record as I am building my set-up. So, would getting a card like the Delta 1010LT and getting N-Tracks or Cakewalk allow me to start recording right away?
I know people usually don't like fielding questions from rookies, but I would greatly appreciate any help in getting me started. It seems from what I've read that N-Tracks or whatever it's called is the easiest and best program to do this...?
Thank you!
--e
I currently have a Dell 8400 with a Intel Pen. 4 processor @ 3GHZ. I believe I have a gig or DDR ram, etc. etc. The computer should be more than capable of recording. I have a basic soundblaster card that I will be replacing soon.
For recording, I am interested in laying down a track with an acoustic/electric guitar, and 2 vocal tracks. Eventually I will be adding piano, strings, bass, drums, etc. Expandability is important. I don't want to have to replace all my stuff in order to do a little more farther down the road.
I really know very little about all this. I have basic electronics knowledge, maybe a little more than basic, but the PC recording is fairly new to me. So please feel free to offer expanded explainations.

Money is not really an issue. I won't be able to buy everything at once necessarily, but I would rather spend a little more to get a high-quality product that's going to give me more features and last longer.
A friend recommended that I get a Delta 1010LT card and ditch the original one I got. From what I understand, this will allow me to just plug the instruments/mics directly into the inputs on the card, and record the track using something like N-Tracks or Cakewalk. Right?
Now the other option I was told I had is to buy an actual mixer, connect it to my computer, and plug the instruments/mics into the mixer. Right? If this is true, do I still need a program like Cakewalk to record onto the computer? I guess I'm not understanding (if it's true) why I would want to buy a mixer and a program for my pc when I could just do it all on pc...
One other thing that is important is that I am able to record as I am building my set-up. So, would getting a card like the Delta 1010LT and getting N-Tracks or Cakewalk allow me to start recording right away?
I know people usually don't like fielding questions from rookies, but I would greatly appreciate any help in getting me started. It seems from what I've read that N-Tracks or whatever it's called is the easiest and best program to do this...?
Thank you!
--e