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i got big pants
Your Face
Registered: Oct 2004
Location: Huntington Beach, CA
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could possibily be your needles...had that problem, sounded all scratchy and shit...then got some whitelabels, sounds 10x's better than before
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Feb-21-2005 08:54
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fr3sh
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: Nov 2004
Location: Vancouver
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i am having the same problem... i have good cables, new needles and i do stay out of the red light district haha... i do believe that the fact that i am using audacity and recording through my microphone jack has something to with my not so good quality of recording...
anyone here use any kind of recording hardware that plugs in usb or my case with a laptop.... usb or cardbus?
if anyone has any links to these products... please post
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Feb-22-2005 11:50
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fr3sh
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: Nov 2004
Location: Vancouver
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| quote: | Originally posted by djxtension
Well, first of all, you shouldn't record through your microphone jack... Use your Line-In. If you don't have one, buy a cheap soundcard that has. Most soundcards have a good sound quality when it comes to recording, and they aren't that expensive. |
thanks bro... are there any soundcards for a lap top that you might recommend?
cardbus or usb are ideal
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Feb-22-2005 20:52
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Derivative
Bipolar Bear
Registered: Jun 2004
Location: Dublin
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| quote: | | i am having the same problem... i have good cables, new needles and i do stay out of the red light district haha... i do believe that the fact that i am using audacity and recording through my microphone jack has something to with my not so good quality of recording... |
dont record through a microphone jack. dont record direct through a line in either. the output from your decks is like a mic source - you have to preamp the signal to line level before you send it to the ins on your soundcard.
you can plug straight into a line input but without a preamp or DI box the signal wont be hot enough. you can up the gain on your mixer a shat load and in your host recording app to compensate for this. but the unfortunate side effect of this is you raise the noisefloor too. so it'll sound very hissy and the bass will be very muddy and blurry. which isnt nice. i used to get this problem running my guitar straight into an analogue input with no preamp. note: this also happens when i run my guitar through the input on my virus b - even though the virus b itself has a sort of dedicated preamp on board. kind of like most mixers.
also, make sure the gain settings on your mixer are configured so that the peak volume is lined up with the 0 point of the channel faders then up the channel faders until they peaks pretty close to 0 dB. if you have the gain ridiculously high and the master volume low with the peak volume of the track over the 0 point you will have one helluva noisefloor that you are sending to your soundcard along with the tunes. only exception i can think of are pioneer mixers where half the dB meter is red (!!). they seem to be designed to operate partly in the red but the rule always applies: dont go over 0 dB. satan gets a kitten every time you go over 0 dB.
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Feb-23-2005 08:51
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