:?Ĭlick to expand.There is no point at which 'Digital Clipping' is good Phil. Posting some small samples of these recordings, ideally where any of this noise is worst/most prominent would indeed be helpful, once we've ruled out the most obvious/easiest things too try.Īlso a screen shot of a single track/album side with no zoom applied, should show clipping points.if it's summat that simple. Saying that tho' this is summat I've encountered before, so may be able to identify it from a listen. If any of this is relating to noise on the recording from too 'hot' a level of gain at the input & the noise floor being raised I'm not sure this will show that easily in the recorded waveform for analysis. Until Phillip actually records a second example of one or two recordings, but does these using battery power as I've suggested, I think we're in the dark on this one. Although I had been waiting for Phillip to get back, following trying some simple playback comparisons when just played normally through his amp.Īlso I still don't think we can totally rule out pooter related mains noise or poor isolation as yet*(these can manifest in a variety of ways, that are audible). Hi Phillip,Are you recording to a laptop or a full sized computer?Ĭlick to expand.Yup that wuz my going to be my next suggestion too Karl. I use different S/W which counts/marks all the clipping points in a recorded passage, I'd have thought Audacity did this too? Been quite a while since I used it. The 'Twittering' you mention could possibly be digital clipping on your recordings, I presume you've been careful with setting the levels correctly from within Audacity? Sorry if all that's a bit in depth, I'm a bit* of a digital vinyl recording dweeb, having been doing this for yonks. If you can't adjust this & it's overloading at the input, even if you trim it below clipping level in your recording S/W you will still get additional noise levels on your recordings as there's to much gain overloading the input & 'Clipping' at that point. To much gain at the input of the recording device can cause this. If this is the case but its also an order of magnitude higher on your recording, this could actually be a second issue on top of the mains related issues I've already mentioned. There are some fixes for this which can work.ĭo you get any of these noise issues, including the hum you also mentioned, when just playing vinyl normally through your Fono Mini straight into your amp? Also is there any hum at all when just listening normally? If the noise goes away then its a pooter related mains or psu issue. Record this as a new file so you can compare both. If you are using a Laptop & usually record on mains power try recording a single side of an album you've already recorded but disconnect the PSU & run off the Lappy's battery. Generally the noise will be a buzzing which can vary in intensity depending on the severity. Is there any chance this could be a mains born issue? Some pooters can have mains noise issues when fed from an analogue source via a USB interface. You will not have to deal with individual files, VinylStudio will handle the entire process, including recording, looking up track listings on the Internet, splitting recordings into tracks, fading tracks in and out, saving tracks as MP3 files and burning both audio and MP3 CDs.ĭon't worry about the beginning and the end of the sound, because it does it all automatically, recording starts when the needle is lowered and stops automatically at the end of the record, furthermore you can decide if the sound will be converted directly to MP3 or WAV format.ĭigitalize your collection, reduce extra sounds and enjoy your cassettes and vinyls on your PC or your portable mp3 player.Are you recording to a laptop or a full sized computer? LP's are recorded as two (or three or four) complete sides and these records are subsequently split up into one MP3 file per track. VinylStudio is a program to transfer your vinyl albums (or cassette tapes) to your computer. If you have lots of vinyl albums and you want to have them converted into mp3 and, by the way, reduce the extra sounds and improve its quality.
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