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Backing up vinyls onto cd
ok i have done some research on this and atm i am using the m-audio transit and ableton live to record my mixes as high quality wavs and they have turned out very nice and are very high quality
BUT
i want to record my vinyls as high quality wav's and back up onto cd's to play on cdj's... quality such that they will still sound amazing on a big club stereo
my question is: is the above setup good ENOUGH? or is there a minimum recording standard to uphold when going for high quality ripping?
I record direct onto audio CDRs on a sony cd recorder, and then I can rip direct as a WAV onto my computer for archiving, re burning etc
If what you are using works for you, then it works for you. If you are happy with it, then stick with it
well it works as far as recording mixes but i have not had the pleasure of being able to play on a big club system yet
how do the recorded tracks sound when you play them on a big system?
as good as vinyl? as warm? do they have a noticable loss (noticable to you that is...not noticable to the average club goer)
i also want to rip my vinyls and play them on cdj's!
at the moment i go through my ecler nuo5 and then to my pc!
is there a hearable loss if i go thorugh my mixer?
yeah i was going to ask a similar question... what about hooking the turntable up directly to the recording source
i suppose you need to have some sort of preamp... but im guessing the average mixer (as a preamp) will degrade the quality somewhat
unless it is the xone v6

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| Originally posted by fr3sh yeah i was going to ask a similar question... what about hooking the turntable up directly to the recording source i suppose you need to have some sort of preamp... but im guessing the average mixer (as a preamp) will degrade the quality somewhat unless it is the xone v6 |
yes it does have digital I/O
i just use the analog in for recording but i suppose there are things that i could do to up the quality... although it is already pretty good
never tried plugging the turntable up to it directly
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| Originally posted by fr3sh never tried plugging the turntable up to it directly |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by fr3sh never tried plugging the turntable up to it directly |
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| Originally posted by sw1 DON'T! The magnetic phono cartridges require a pre-amp to boost the levels and to provide the RIAA equalization. |
the best thing you can do is use a brand new stylus. on a technics deck using a high end mixer or ideally a standalone phono preamp. and if the mixer/preamp has a sp/dif output you should use this into your soundcard. make sure you use technics decks or ones with good wow/flutter figures so the bpm doesnt fluctuate.
however some decks now come with sp/dif outs. maybe invest if you have spare cash?
And don't forget to master the vinyl after its converted to digital...i use soundforge and it works great, crisp clear no pops or crackles!
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| Originally posted by fr3sh yeah i know i wasn't going to... but i suppose a mixer is not the "ideal" preamp... is it? |
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| Originally posted by Freak Its a preamp. they all are RIAA preamps, including the ones in dj mixers...so all do the same job and conform to the same standards. You can buy a small box preamp in funky brushed alloy for like $15 or something equally cheap from radioshack (no idea if you still can but i did earlier in the year from radioshack) |
)
your setup sounds fine. if the mixer you are using is good enough for a large club system then it will be fine as a preamp.
mastering is a funny one. i would probably just use the loudness maximiser and minimal compression here but no eq or exciters. you dont want to play with the original sound too much... just get the cd so its as loud as a commercial cd.
as regards to the tempo variation: dont worry. a technics deck is so accurate that it would stay sync'd with another one playing the same record for hours. the tempo flutter is nt measurable and wont effect even a half and hour long beatmatch.
the main issue for you is making sure the cd's sound loud.
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| Originally posted by fr3sh yeah i know the mixer is a preamp but i am going for the best quality rip i can possibly get 1) what is the IDEAL preamp for hooking up to my tech 1200 deck (or does it matter what preamp i use) |
so are these preamps that are meant to be hooked up to vinyl tt's specifically?
errr, what other type of turtables than "vinyl tt's" do you know?
yes, the ones I mentioned are "phono pre-amps". There are "general" pre-amps as well for example you can put those between a CD-player and your amp. but actually most "amps" have built-in pre-amps, some of which have phono-pre-amps as well.
if you want to see some seperate "regular" pre-amps and "real" amps (not sure if there is an english word that expresses "endstufe" = german for final-amp (?)) check out http://www.marklevinson.com/
..
Another option i'm told is to record it off your amplifer with Xitel Inport..i'm not sure how good it is, but i've been told it works pretty ok....anybody?
that looks really easy to use...no idea how good it sound, though.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by fr3sh so are these preamps that are meant to be hooked up to vinyl tt's specifically? |
mm = moving magnet
mc = moving coil
afaik
there are phono pre-amps for both, some can handle only one or the other, some can handle both types.
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| ceramic phono catridges |
Sorry for the misspelling. It's caRtridges.
Here is a link I found with some info.
who would have figured that info would be posted by someone on amazon.com of all places... thanks for the link
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