Audio Cassette to CD??
#1
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I was wondering if it was possible to some how get a tape (older family recorded stuff, growing up etc..) on to a CD. I know you would have to get it to the computer in a digital format but then how would you burn it to CD so you could listen to it on a regular CD player and not just the computer?
Just thought I would ask...
Just thought I would ask...
#2
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Hmmm, just a guess here, as I have never done it, but in theory you could go from a boom box or something like that with 2 RCA's and get a cable from Radio Shack or wherever that would take it to the input of your sound card.
Then just record everything as a wav and record the wav into a CD Audio format...
Or I suppose you could purchase one of these home "rack" CD-Burners and do it that way...
Then just record everything as a wav and record the wav into a CD Audio format...
Or I suppose you could purchase one of these home "rack" CD-Burners and do it that way...
#3
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I'm not entirely certain, but I think if you record the file as a .wav file you can do what you want. I have mixed a cd by copying it to my hard drive, rearranged the order of the songs, and then recorded to cd. The problem is it may just be a feature of Easy CD Creator.
I'm sure most cd burning software allows recording sound files in a cd player readable format. Try searching thru it's help files.
I'm sure most cd burning software allows recording sound files in a cd player readable format. Try searching thru it's help files.
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I have successfully done this before. (Although I did it with LPs instead of cassette tapes.) The guys above are right. I just got a RCA to mini-jack cable (cheap at RadioShack or the like) and went straight from my turntable to the input on my sound card. I recorded the songs as WAV files (you can use whatever program you want, it really makes no difference), then I used EasyCD Creator to burn the CD audio directly from the WAV files. All-in-all, it was a very painless process. The only trouble I had was getting the audio levels correct. Of course, I didn't have a really good sound recorded, so that was probably the problem.