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Started October 28th, 2006 · 18 replies · Latest reply by FreqMan 18 years ago
You can't really beat Audacity for this application, and the price is right. You will also need a 3.5mm stereo jack to jack lead, connect the headphones out of the MD to the Line in of the Dell, and then select that input in Audacity. Set the MD volume to about 3/4 of full scale and adjust the record level in Audacity so the signal doesn't reach 100% on peaks. 50-80% is good enough.
Thanks for that
Have installed Goldwave
All i need to do now is get a recording without the bad distortion have tried turning down input but still loads of distortion on recording, need to get the info.
Thanks again great web site....feel like a need to be spending a lot of time here.
Neil
You are going in through the line input and not the mic input, right?
The Windows sound mixer has two sections, playback and recording. If you go start -> Control Panel -> Sounds & Audio Devices -> Advanced
you get a play control with a load of sliders. On that control you need to press Options -> Properties and select Recording to control your record mixer. Tick the box next to the slider marked Line in
Ahh, no, I'm afraid not.
Check out this picture:
http://img164.imageshack.us/img164/5290/p6250413ij0.th.jpg
you can see this is a rubbish picture (sorry, its really out of focus....its tricky getting a camera round the back of a computer and focusing it!) of the back of my computer - the sound card bit. now this is what the holes are:
Red/Pink is Mic. This is for your microphone and is best suited for microphone inputs
Green is Speakers. This should have your speakers/headphones plugged in!
Blue is Line In. This is where you 3.5mm Jack to 3.5mm Jack (standard headphone male bot at both ends plugs into.)
once you have plugged your jack to jack into the Line in plug the other end into the Line out of your mini disc player and follow the instructions in ermine's first post.
That is a drag. You will get rotten results from the mic in, because
it's normally mono
it's far too sensitive and you will get loads of noise, even if you turn the MD output waaaaay down
it puts out +5v on one of the pins which will give you a scratchy connection anyway
How's about using Audacity on a desktop computer for the transfer? You really aren't going to get satisfactory results using the laptop on mic input.
If you really want to use the laptop for audio recording and transfer in future and can't access a desktop you'd need to get an add-on USB sound card or a pcmcia card.
You are correct in that a NetMD such as yours cannot transfer recordings to the PC via USB. You'd need a HiMD to do that (and if you wanted to xfer this recording made with your old deck you would need a Sony RH1 HiMD, others won't xfer legacy recordings)
Two money-no-object solutions for your laptop and MD recordings
1. Buy a USB sound card, like an Edirol UA-1EX. This has a very clean Line-in facility.
2. Buy a midi MD unit like a Sony MDS-980 and play your MD on that, and use optical out into optical input on a UA-1EX (again) or similar. This is what I do. It's still real-time transfer however.
Mike
http://www.echoaudio.com/Products/CardBus/
is a -relatively- cheap and tiny solution for a good noise-less i/o...
- bram
Bram
http://www.echoaudio.com/Products/CardBus/is a -relatively- cheap and tiny solution for a good noise-less i/o...
- bram
Echo Indigo (Cardbus) is £150 in UK, UA-1EX is £69
Mike
The PCMCIA isn't bad.
I have 2 soundblaster externals - the first is a USB, and that works great all the way around, but it needs to be powered. The second is PCMCIA, and it works mostly good.
If you're going LINE IN - you will have no problem, but I don't like the microphone inputs. In my opinion, they're only slightly better than the laptop's own microphone input.
I originally got the PCMCIA soundcard, so I could record remotely with my laptop - but now when I use it, I tend to go from a mixer to the line in (which defeats the purpose of going mobile) or I'll use a minidisc as a preamp.
I got it 2 years ago, so hopefully technology's gotten better, or there are superior brands available.
But for what you want, it should work great.