quoted 1 line Enjoy. <> Enjoy. <http://www.thinkgeek.com/computing/drives/6908/>
Well, goodness. That's amazing :-) How retro can you get.
So; what do you want to know? Go for the 90 min tapes - the 60's
work out more expensive and are too short anyway... you want more
than an hour at a time, right?
Don't get the 120 min ones, because the physical tape is too thin and
thus more likely to get damaged easily.
quoted 1 line tips and tricks for recording
> tips and tricks for recording
I used to hook up the tape deck to the PC sound-outs and then
arrange a playlist in WinAmp (carefully ensuring approx 46 mins
playtime per side). There's a plug-in called Square Soft Advanced
Crossfading that does a good job for gap-free replay. THEN, when all
is ready to go, press RECORD, but you'll have to sit and monitor the
whole thing in real time to adjust levels (unless it's all coming from
one source like one CD with the same sound balance in the original).
This, folks, is a time consuming labour of love.
Personal preference: I don't use Dolby. If you do, then only go for
Dolby B, but do a few tests with Dolby in and out, and see which way
you prefer the sound.
Have fun ...
I
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