Tech Support > Computers & Technology > Audio, MP3 & Music > software to transfer records to cd
software to transfer records to cd
Posted by DURANGO on August 9th, 2005


What is a good software to use to transfer vinyl records to cd. Im
using roxio 5.0 and roxio 7.5 bot seem ok but they dont have all the
filters for the pops and crackle. Is there a software that will do a
good job with some filters?


thanks for the replys

Posted by dadiOH on August 9th, 2005


DURANGO wrote:
dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico



Posted by Bruce Bowmaker on August 9th, 2005


I've always used Cool Edit and found it fine

"DURANGO" <dss56@hotmail.com> wrote in message
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Posted by fred-bloggs on August 9th, 2005


DURANGO <dss56@hotmail.com> wrote in
news14if1la2fdlmh976rjbemjh7sge5vcin4@4ax.com:

Goldwave is an audio editor with a pop/click filter and noise reduction.
http://www.goldwave.com/release.php#download

--
fred

Posted by Ashley on August 13th, 2005


See http://www.fleximusic.com/waveditor/audioeditor.htm
"DURANGO" <dss56@hotmail.com> wrote in message
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Posted by Wayne R. on August 13th, 2005


On Tue, 09 Aug 2005 16:23:58 -0400, DURANGO <dss56@hotmail.com> wrote
(with clarity & insight):

I've been using Wave Corrector with really good results.

It handles the base recording, automatically filters the pops &
crackles, lets you edit/improve on what it's done automatically,
splits the tracks (can be automatic plus allows manual finetuning),
then welcomes external encoders & tag transfers. There's also very
good support & forums, too, in case you need it.

http://wavecor.co.uk

I also found that replacing the stock sound card dramatically improved
the results as well - not that yours needs replacement, but if it
does, I found the M-Audio 2496 to be excellent ($95 from Amazon).

http://www.m-audio.com/products/en_u...2496-main.html

Anyway, even with the superb Wave Corrector, getting the best results
possible *can* be a lot of work (depending on the disk, the music and
your needs). I got a small spray bottle (half distilled water, half
99%-pure Isopropanol (alcohol)) and some microfiber cloth - this does
a pretty good job of getting the most crap out of the grooves. The
time comes from being meticulous in cleaning the waveform of the pops,
etc. Even though Wave Corrector can do a lot of it automatically, it's
not magic - great results are possible with some personal attention.


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