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Silly question!
Probably a silly question to bring up on this group but does anyone have
any opinions on the USB turntables John Lewis are selling? The reason I ask is I've discovered a box full of 1960s singles that I'd quite like to stick on my iThings and can't be fagged trying to marry the hi-fi and computer together to do the job properly as it would involve major rewiring sessions to get them into the same room. -- Graeme Wall This account not read, substitute trains for rail. |
Silly question!
In article , Graeme Wall
wrote: Probably a silly question to bring up on this group but does anyone have any opinions on the USB turntables John Lewis are selling? The reason I ask is I've discovered a box full of 1960s singles that I'd quite like to stick on my iThings and can't be fagged trying to marry the hi-fi and computer together to do the job properly as it would involve major rewiring sessions to get them into the same room. If you have a laptop available it might be cheaper and give better results to buy a machine-powered USB ADC like the ones sold by Behringer or Focusrite. See http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/HFN/ADC/USBrecording.html for some more info. Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
Silly question!
In article ,
Graeme Wall wrote: Probably a silly question to bring up on this group but does anyone have any opinions on the USB turntables John Lewis are selling? Probably very average in every way. The reason I ask is I've discovered a box full of 1960s singles that I'd quite like to stick on my iThings and can't be fagged trying to marry the hi-fi and computer together to do the job properly as it would involve major rewiring sessions to get them into the same room. If you already have a decent record deck, buy an RIAA pre-amp and connect that to the line in on your computer. Cheaper, takes up a lot less room to store afterwards, and likely better. You can get battery powered ones. -- *Never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Silly question!
On 08/07/2015 13:35, Jim Lesurf wrote:
In article , Graeme Wall wrote: Probably a silly question to bring up on this group but does anyone have any opinions on the USB turntables John Lewis are selling? The reason I ask is I've discovered a box full of 1960s singles that I'd quite like to stick on my iThings and can't be fagged trying to marry the hi-fi and computer together to do the job properly as it would involve major rewiring sessions to get them into the same room. If you have a laptop available it might be cheaper and give better results to buy a machine-powered USB ADC like the ones sold by Behringer or Focusrite. See http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/HFN/ADC/USBrecording.html for some more info. Looks interesting but I don't have a laptop unfortunately! -- Graeme Wall This account not read, substitute trains for rail. |
Silly question!
Graeme Wall:
Probably a silly question to bring up on this group but does anyone have any opinions on the USB turntables John Lewis are selling? The reason I ask is I've discovered a box full of 1960s singles that I'd quite like to stick on my iThings and can't be fagged trying to marry the hi-fi and computer together to do the job properly as it would involve major rewiring sessions to get them into the same room. -- Graeme Wall This account not read, substitute trains for rail. The Audio Technica AT-LP120 USB Turntable (£270) would probably be OK but the cartridge fitted isn't what I would choose. The cheaper ones look dreadful - but for £70 for everything you can't expect any better. Michael Kellett |
Silly question!
Well for singles it probably does not matter that much.
However not knowing the ones you refer to, I could not hazard a guess. The interfacing of a computer should be easy, why not pick up any old xp machine and shove it on the hend of the hi fi, once you have the wav files you can copy them to a ram stick and process them on your favourite audio editor in the other room. That is what I do and you only need a 1gig machiine with say an 80 gig ide drive and say the demo copy of goldwave with either on board audio or a cheap old sound card. Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active "Graeme Wall" wrote in message ... Probably a silly question to bring up on this group but does anyone have any opinions on the USB turntables John Lewis are selling? The reason I ask is I've discovered a box full of 1960s singles that I'd quite like to stick on my iThings and can't be fagged trying to marry the hi-fi and computer together to do the job properly as it would involve major rewiring sessions to get them into the same room. -- Graeme Wall This account not read, substitute trains for rail. |
Silly question!
In article ,
Graeme Wall wrote: On 08/07/2015 13:35, Jim Lesurf wrote: In article , Graeme Wall wrote: Probably a silly question to bring up on this group but does anyone have any opinions on the USB turntables John Lewis are selling? The reason I ask is I've discovered a box full of 1960s singles that I'd quite like to stick on my iThings and can't be fagged trying to marry the hi-fi and computer together to do the job properly as it would involve major rewiring sessions to get them into the same room. If you have a laptop available it might be cheaper and give better results to buy a machine-powered USB ADC like the ones sold by Behringer or Focusrite. See http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/HFN/ADC/USBrecording.html for some more info. Looks interesting but I don't have a laptop unfortunately! But if you do have an existing record deck, that could surely be moved to the computer easily? Or you could use a wireless link between the existing Hi-Fi and computer. That could also be useful for other things. -- *A bartender is just a pharmacist with a limited inventory * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Silly question!
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
wrote: In article , Graeme Wall wrote: On 08/07/2015 13:35, Jim Lesurf wrote: In article , Graeme Wall wrote: Probably a silly question to bring up on this group but does anyone have any opinions on the USB turntables John Lewis are selling? The reason I ask is I've discovered a box full of 1960s singles that I'd quite like to stick on my iThings and can't be fagged trying to marry the hi-fi and computer together to do the job properly as it would involve major rewiring sessions to get them into the same room. If you have a laptop available it might be cheaper and give better results to buy a machine-powered USB ADC like the ones sold by Behringer or Focusrite. See http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/HFN/ADC/USBrecording.html for some more info. Looks interesting but I don't have a laptop unfortunately! But if you do have an existing record deck, that could surely be moved to the computer easily? Or you could use a wireless link between the existing Hi-Fi and computer. That could also be useful for other things. Note also that some of the cheaper Behringer ADCs have an inbuilt RIAA preamp for MM cartridges. I think they're about 25 quid. How good they are I can't say, but used with care they may be better than a complete cheap 'USB turntable'. Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
Silly question!
I can't comment on those models specifically, but generally I wouldn't
expect much from any modern turntable. These days, if you want quality at a good price, you buy CDs (assuming the CDs you want have been well produced in themselves, which is another completely different story). So turntables have to be realistically affordable compared with CD decks, and this usually means compromises such as a ceramic cartridge, rather than a quality magnetic one, etc. But then, as another poster has pointed out, singles weren't themselves usually of the highest quality, and usually were the worst treated vinyls. There were the stack and drop-down mechanisms in cheap single-unit players which allowed the user to play sequences of vinyls, but which tended not to treat them well. Also, many users used to lift the needle of at the end of a single and plonk it back down at the beginning again, sometimes manually with all the attendant risk of accidental damage, sometimes using a setting on the turntable. And I remember one particular barman used to nudge the juke-box as his favourite songs came to an end, thus sending the stylus bouncing back to the beginning again! So the main help that I can provide here is about the actual digitisation process itself, having done all my vinyls just a few years ago. You may care to read my notes on the subject which I've written up here ... http://www.macfh.co.uk/JavaJive/Audi...storation.html Also, at the time both here and in uk.tech.digital-tv, there were long and detailed threads about the problems I faced. AFAICR, they began with this one, though there were more over the next few weeks or months: Java Jive: 'ROT: PC Audio Recording & Playback (was: Holst and a Headache), 6/12/11' https://groups.google.com/d/msg/uk.t...k/a7R64KmusM8J HTHs On Wed, 08 Jul 2015 10:19:39 +0100, Graeme Wall wrote: Probably a silly question to bring up on this group but does anyone have any opinions on the USB turntables John Lewis are selling? The reason I ask is I've discovered a box full of 1960s singles that I'd quite like to stick on my iThings and can't be fagged trying to marry the hi-fi and computer together to do the job properly as it would involve major rewiring sessions to get them into the same room. -- ================================================== ====== Please always reply to ng as the email in this post's header does not exist. Or use a contact address at: http://www.macfh.co.uk/JavaJive/JavaJive.html http://www.macfh.co.uk/Macfarlane/Macfarlane.html |
Silly question!
On 09/07/2015 10:26, Brian-Gaff wrote:
Well for singles it probably does not matter that much. However not knowing the ones you refer to, I could not hazard a guess. The interfacing of a computer should be easy, why not pick up any old xp machine and shove it on the hend of the hi fi, once you have the wav files you can copy them to a ram stick and process them on your favourite audio editor in the other room. That is what I do and you only need a 1gig machiine with say an 80 gig ide drive and say the demo copy of goldwave with either on board audio or a cheap old sound card. Brian That's a thought, though never having used Windows I might struggle a bit :-) -- Graeme Wall This account not read, substitute trains for rail. |
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