A
AVATC
New member
Hello, all! I am a voice actor with a studio. I have never made DAT recordings; other clients are happy to receive files on line or on CD. I admit I still have much to learn about recording! I would be so grateful if any of you can discern whether I am doing something wrong in my process or setup.
I recently recorded an audiobook for a publisher who could only take the finished product on DAT or cassette. I sent my 10 hours of recordings on DAT to the publisher. The producer there said she could hear the tapes, but they sound distorted.
When I asked what kind of distortion are we talking about, I was told that it sounded like static. I am not dealing with a very technical group there and could not get a better answer. She said their DAT machine doesn't have the problem because they can play other tapes and not hear the distortion. When they have had this problem with DATs from other narrators, they have asked the narrator to master the recording to cassette. She thinks if she sends the DAT back to me, I won't hear the distortion on my machine. She thinks I recorded at a different frequency than they use. My machine defaults to 48kHz, but it automatically changes to 44.1kHz when I start recording from the computer. They use 44.1kHz when converting the DATs to cassette.
I bought a previously-owned Panasonic 3700 DAT recorder just for the purpose of working with this client. I also installed a Delta DIO 2496 sound card in my computer to connect to the 3700. I use Cool Edit Pro to edit all of my recordings.
I'm changed the output in Cool Edit to the s/pdif port of my Delta card, pressed record on the Panasonic and play within Cool Edit to transfer the recordings in real time (ugh!) from my computer to the DATs. I listened to the tapes at various random points as I rewound them, and they sounded good to me.
If I turn the volume on the DAT recorder up to full blast, I can hear a slight buzzing in the background during the pauses in narration. I can also hear this buzzing when listening in the headphones, which are connected to the built-in soundcard in my Sony Vaio computer. I'm wondering if the 2 soundcards are causing interference with each other. I don't recall hearing this slight buzzing (which is more evident when I move the mouse) when I just had the one soundcard. It seemed to start when the 2nd one was installed. I don't know if this buzzing is what the producer is talking about or something else entirely.
Any advice or suggestions? I need to solve this problem as I haven't gotten paid for the last book but already have a commitment with this publisher for the next book.
Thanks so much for your help!
Karen
I recently recorded an audiobook for a publisher who could only take the finished product on DAT or cassette. I sent my 10 hours of recordings on DAT to the publisher. The producer there said she could hear the tapes, but they sound distorted.
When I asked what kind of distortion are we talking about, I was told that it sounded like static. I am not dealing with a very technical group there and could not get a better answer. She said their DAT machine doesn't have the problem because they can play other tapes and not hear the distortion. When they have had this problem with DATs from other narrators, they have asked the narrator to master the recording to cassette. She thinks if she sends the DAT back to me, I won't hear the distortion on my machine. She thinks I recorded at a different frequency than they use. My machine defaults to 48kHz, but it automatically changes to 44.1kHz when I start recording from the computer. They use 44.1kHz when converting the DATs to cassette.
I bought a previously-owned Panasonic 3700 DAT recorder just for the purpose of working with this client. I also installed a Delta DIO 2496 sound card in my computer to connect to the 3700. I use Cool Edit Pro to edit all of my recordings.
I'm changed the output in Cool Edit to the s/pdif port of my Delta card, pressed record on the Panasonic and play within Cool Edit to transfer the recordings in real time (ugh!) from my computer to the DATs. I listened to the tapes at various random points as I rewound them, and they sounded good to me.
If I turn the volume on the DAT recorder up to full blast, I can hear a slight buzzing in the background during the pauses in narration. I can also hear this buzzing when listening in the headphones, which are connected to the built-in soundcard in my Sony Vaio computer. I'm wondering if the 2 soundcards are causing interference with each other. I don't recall hearing this slight buzzing (which is more evident when I move the mouse) when I just had the one soundcard. It seemed to start when the 2nd one was installed. I don't know if this buzzing is what the producer is talking about or something else entirely.
Any advice or suggestions? I need to solve this problem as I haven't gotten paid for the last book but already have a commitment with this publisher for the next book.
Thanks so much for your help!
Karen