Draging 20th Century Music Recording Technology into the 21st?
Specifically cassettes.
So I got minor stash of studio-produced cassette tapes (100 or so, I dunno for sure). Both of my previous stereo components for playing cassette tapes have both bit the dust at some point over the a 4-5 year period about 2 years ago (attempting to play a very old, import copy of some relatively early AC/DC album if I recall correctly).
Does anyone have any experience/suggestions to rip my cassette tapes (of the 100 or so I have I would hazard to guess that I only really have about 50-75 that I don't already have in some other more palatable format (vinyl, CD or digital))?
Last weekend I picked up a god-awful cheap (on sale) boombox thing that supported recording the playing cassette tapes to mp3 (QFX J-22U). I was able to 'rip' one of my tapes after much trial and error after many repeated attempts. Long Story/Short: the dang thing is apparently defective and and doesn't behave with any sort of reliability.. I have so far been unable to rip a 2nd tape after multiple attempts so I'll be returning the thing and get my $19.95 back Also, I realized that the mp3's were being generated are a 64 kbps. Ouch.
Should I invest in some actual 'quality' stereo-component cassette deck thing and simply jack that into my PC to do the ripping (with whatever software might exist - Audacity (name? spelling (Tori)? ) or is there an some other all-in-one device that might do this for me with minimal effort?
Side note: Once I rip these dang things I'll keep the couple that are near/dear and dump the rest out on the local Freecycle site. Before I do that I'll be more than happy to give them away to any of the peeps here who might be interested.
So I got minor stash of studio-produced cassette tapes (100 or so, I dunno for sure). Both of my previous stereo components for playing cassette tapes have both bit the dust at some point over the a 4-5 year period about 2 years ago (attempting to play a very old, import copy of some relatively early AC/DC album if I recall correctly).
Does anyone have any experience/suggestions to rip my cassette tapes (of the 100 or so I have I would hazard to guess that I only really have about 50-75 that I don't already have in some other more palatable format (vinyl, CD or digital))?
Last weekend I picked up a god-awful cheap (on sale) boombox thing that supported recording the playing cassette tapes to mp3 (QFX J-22U). I was able to 'rip' one of my tapes after much trial and error after many repeated attempts. Long Story/Short: the dang thing is apparently defective and and doesn't behave with any sort of reliability.. I have so far been unable to rip a 2nd tape after multiple attempts so I'll be returning the thing and get my $19.95 back Also, I realized that the mp3's were being generated are a 64 kbps. Ouch.
Should I invest in some actual 'quality' stereo-component cassette deck thing and simply jack that into my PC to do the ripping (with whatever software might exist - Audacity (name? spelling (Tori)? ) or is there an some other all-in-one device that might do this for me with minimal effort?
Side note: Once I rip these dang things I'll keep the couple that are near/dear and dump the rest out on the local Freecycle site. Before I do that I'll be more than happy to give them away to any of the peeps here who might be interested.
Comments
If it mean commercial recordings, I'm having a hard time imagining you'd find it worthwhile to try to rip rather than replace.
Process-wise, yeah, I think you'd want:
- good deck
- an analog input appropriate for your computer (sound-card, etc)
- Audacity or equivalent
- willingness to massage/edit the result the resulting WAVs, then convert to mp3 as desired
I tried this once using my old cassette deck, with unlistenable results. Still have some of those old "Giganti del Jazz" bargain cassettes, w/ no way of listening to them.
But look around the technology may have improved. They have a whole knowledge base and user support site system at the manufacturer site staffed by volunteers that seemed pretty helpful.