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| quote: | Originally posted by hey cheggy
Spin doctor, how do you split it up into tracks. The only way i know of is to cut the entire track up into seperate parts and save them individually. I'm using sound forge, i just want to know (using any program) how to do this, and with what program. |
There are some programs floating about on the net that can take MP3 or WAV files and split it at a given time point. I’m sorry but I can’t for the life of me remember any of their names. Thing is there not very accurate especially if you want the track split at a specific point on the CD. If your burning in Nero, you can actually burn the whole .wav as one file and tell the program where and when you want track splits in. This is handy if you want a quick and easy job but I’ve found it’s not very accurate. I find that the best way is to cut the main recording into separate tracks in your sound editor, after saving a backup of course, and burn them as separate tracks. This takes time but you’ll get the most accurate results. Unfortunately I’ve only had experience using Cool Edit Pro so I can’t really help you with Sound Forge issues.
| quote: | Originally posted by Helta
The soundcard is crappy, and so can only record at upto a 100,000 bitrate, and it sounds either
a) Really quiet and crackley, when put through the linein
or
b) Stupidly loud and clipping, when put through the mic,
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This may not be a problem with the sound card. Plug the output you want to record from your mixer into you Line In. Then get a tune playing on one of you turntables and open up the fader for that Input. Next get the gain so that the main, loudest part of the track peaks at 0dB, just as it normally would. Then open up the program your using for recording have a look through the options and settings and make sure it’s set to record the correct input from the correct sound card. Tell the thing to record. While it’s recording open up the Sound Mixer / Volume Control that comes inbuilt in windows. Search for your Line In control and adjust until it peaks at about –2 to –3db. This is just to ensure you don’t end up clipping the recording. Now stop recording, open up an new session and go ahead and record you mix. Then when your done you can amplify/dynamic process the wav so it’s loud as it can go with out clipping!
Hope this helps guys! If your still stuck post and I’ll try and help some more 
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