On Sunday 22 August 2004 02:51 am, Jason White wrote:
My main interest at present is in making archival
recordings of
material that I originally recorded on audio cassette. My system
currently contains a C-Media CM8738 controller as part of the Asus
system board, which is recognized by Alsa. I assume that for quality
results I will need better sound hardware. I asked this question of a
local user's group last year and was informed that the M-Audio Delta
66 is of high quality and has good Alsa support. It was further suggested
that one of the USB A/D converters could be useful as it would also
work on a laptop.
Taking into account price, performance and driver support, what
options do you think I should consider?
To connect to a cassette tape recorder is it sufficient to run a cable
from its audio output to the input of the sound card, or is an audio
isolation transformer also necessary (not sure where one would acquire
this but I have heard that they are sometimes needed)?
There are informative reviews at
http://www.linuxhardware.org/ but
they focus mainly on playback functionality rather than recording.
Any suggestions for a newcomer to the field would be most welcome.
Jason.
Was the program originally recorded on a deck with noise reduction?
I was just ripping some tracks from old old 4 track cassette masters
that were DBX'ed. 2:1 expansion works for the "decoding".
Dolby is a different story, it's more complex.