I tried to digitize vinyl records and I use the following just as a tried out.
XP 1400+
on board sound card
512M ram
win2000
music match jukebox Plus 8.0
an 10 year old DD turntable
(no HIFI system )
I connect the RCA plugs from the turntable to the line-in of my sound card (thru a RCA-mini jack converter). Start MM, set everything I am suppose to (hopefully leave out nothing), lower the cartidage of the turntable and don't hear a sound from my PC speakers!!! I press the REC button in MM anyway and record for about 1 min. Stop recording and tried to playback the file that I created. Of course, you all know the result--nothing can be heard.
Next I hook up the external speaker port of my notebook with the line-in of my sound card(this time jack to jack). I play a music cd on the notebook and record with MM on my PC. This time I got something. The intensity of the wav file recorded was so low that I have to stick my ears to the PC speakers before I can hear it. When I play my recorded wav file with winamp, the bars (identifying the intensity) did not even show up. Where am I suppose to adjust the recording volume of such ?? Can any indication be shown when I am recording that I am picking up a signal at all? If I use a better sound card or a HIFI (for the turntable), would the low intensity problem be any better? (But mini HIFI do not have a rec-out these days!!!).
In the first setup, I hope is just because the signal is too weak or have the cartridage gone trashed? (I don't have a HIFI system to make sure for the time being) I hope cartridage don't go wrong when left unattended.
Another thing I have done :
I tried to seperate my PC speaker further apart so I buy myself some longer wires and mini jack to 'redo' my speakers. When I plug the mini jack (that I purchase from audio shop) into the line-out (aka speakers) of my sound card, I found that they don't fit perfectly. Sometimes I have to pull out the jack a little bit before the speakers could work (before it wasn't like that). If it have been a wrong size jack, it could not be 'plug in' at all, but now it is just a 'not fit'. Does anybody has any idea? Could this be a mm/inches standard problem? This also happens to my other jack extension and the RCA-jack converter too.
Any input will be much appreciated. Tks in advance
XP 1400+
on board sound card
512M ram
win2000
music match jukebox Plus 8.0
an 10 year old DD turntable
(no HIFI system )
I connect the RCA plugs from the turntable to the line-in of my sound card (thru a RCA-mini jack converter). Start MM, set everything I am suppose to (hopefully leave out nothing), lower the cartidage of the turntable and don't hear a sound from my PC speakers!!! I press the REC button in MM anyway and record for about 1 min. Stop recording and tried to playback the file that I created. Of course, you all know the result--nothing can be heard.
Next I hook up the external speaker port of my notebook with the line-in of my sound card(this time jack to jack). I play a music cd on the notebook and record with MM on my PC. This time I got something. The intensity of the wav file recorded was so low that I have to stick my ears to the PC speakers before I can hear it. When I play my recorded wav file with winamp, the bars (identifying the intensity) did not even show up. Where am I suppose to adjust the recording volume of such ?? Can any indication be shown when I am recording that I am picking up a signal at all? If I use a better sound card or a HIFI (for the turntable), would the low intensity problem be any better? (But mini HIFI do not have a rec-out these days!!!).
In the first setup, I hope is just because the signal is too weak or have the cartridage gone trashed? (I don't have a HIFI system to make sure for the time being) I hope cartridage don't go wrong when left unattended.
Another thing I have done :
I tried to seperate my PC speaker further apart so I buy myself some longer wires and mini jack to 'redo' my speakers. When I plug the mini jack (that I purchase from audio shop) into the line-out (aka speakers) of my sound card, I found that they don't fit perfectly. Sometimes I have to pull out the jack a little bit before the speakers could work (before it wasn't like that). If it have been a wrong size jack, it could not be 'plug in' at all, but now it is just a 'not fit'. Does anybody has any idea? Could this be a mm/inches standard problem? This also happens to my other jack extension and the RCA-jack converter too.
Any input will be much appreciated. Tks in advance