Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Marantz CDR420 Portable MP3/CD Recording System

!±8± Marantz CDR420 Portable MP3/CD Recording System

Brand : Marantz | Rate : | Price : $849.00
Post Date : Jan 10, 2012 16:57:48 | Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Marantz Professional introduces the industry's first Portable CD Recording System designed to completely eliminate the need for a PC for audio conversion, post production, and CD manufacturing. Now you can record an entire, uninterrupted day in high quality audio formats that perfectly match your application. Organize and assemble your audio files onto inexpensive blank CDs for listening and archiving. If you can operate a cassette deck, you can record in flexible MP3 or uncompressed WAV formats and make professional CDs for your organization.

  • Auto Time Date Stamping
  • On-the-fly Keyboard Input File Naming
  • Quick Jump Auto Navigation
  • Copy, Cut & Paste Audio Editing
  • Easy Multiple CD Volume Creation With Exclusive Audio Overlap Feature

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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

LP to CD Recorder - Convert LP to CD Easily With Great Quality

!±8± LP to CD Recorder - Convert LP to CD Easily With Great Quality

LPs are now a thing of past but I can not see my old collection biting the dust. You can relive your great memories If you record your LPs into your computer. I have just finished recording my collection and I can not tell you how emotional feeling It is to listen my own vintage collection again!

This task may sound a tedious task but indeed It is not! The process is very simple and involves recording of LPs into your computer.

Here is what you will need to convert LPs To CDs:-

1. A Turntable to play the records.
2. A RCA To Stereo cable to connect output of your turntable into Line jack of your sound card.
3. A LP To CD Recorder software.
4. A computer with a sound card.
5. You may need an amplifier If the output level of your turntable is really low but In most cases you won't need an amplifier.

Now that you have all the necessary things on hand, lets start this process. Please follow these steps and you should be able to record LPs:

1. First of all, please connect output jacks of your turntable to Line jack of your sound card. Usually the color of Line jack should be blue.

2. Run LP To CD Recorder software and select Line recording source and start recording. Now immediately start playback in your turntable and monitor the input. You should be able to hear what is being recorded.

3. Once the recording is finished, you can edit the recorded files to remove any commercials or unwanted segments. You can also split the long recorded file into individual tracks automatically. It is also possible to remove hum, hiss, clipping and other recording noise from the recording.

4. After cleaning the tracks, now save the files and select the tracks you want to burn on a CD to create an Audio CD or MP3 CD. Thats all you need to do!

Recording LPs To CDs is very easy but you need to give it a try. If you just read the instructions, It may sound hard but when you start doing it, It is easy as breeze.

Things you should remember when you are recording:

1. Please don't record at loud volume as your recordings may get distorted. You should set the recording volume slider somewhat in middle or a bit more.

2. You should not use Microphone recording socket instead of Line In as results will not be satisfactory.

3. To get the best results, always burn an Audio CD of the recording instead of burn an MP3 CD. MP3 format is a compressed format and If you convert LPs to MP3 CDs, there might be negligible lose of quality.

4. Use a software which is capable of recording, splitting, cleaning and burning the files. If you process the files into several different software, there may be some harm to the quality of recording.


LP to CD Recorder - Convert LP to CD Easily With Great Quality

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Friday, December 16, 2011

Philips CDR775BK Dual-Deck Audio CD Recorder

!±8±Philips CDR775BK Dual-Deck Audio CD Recorder

Brand : Philips
Rate :
Price :
Post Date : Dec 16, 2011 16:42:27
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Philips' CDR775BK CD recorder smashes the 0 price point for dual-disc CD decks, bringing high-speed recording and hard-wired convenience to a new level of affordability.

The deck works equally well as a recorder and as a player, thanks to its abundant hook-up options, though it doesn't muster the stellar quality from its analog outputs that you'll find in pricier CD recorders and players. (The digital outputs sound fine, however.)

The CDR775BK is equally happy receiving data from either of the two established means of digital audio transmission (optical or coaxial), and its analog inputs let you feed the recorder from external devices such as a cassette deck or a turntable--though a turntable must first be routed through a phono preamplifier, such as the phono input on a receiver.

Topping the list of cool playback features is the CDR775BK's DJ mode, which lets the two trays function independently; each "deck" offers a choice of analog or coaxial digital outputs. This means, taking the mode literally, that you can make yourself the life of a party by routing the deck's respective outputs into a DJ's mixer and letting fly with a new song just as the song from the other tray is fading out.

Alternately, you can route the outputs to separate amplifiers or receivers and enjoy simultaneous playback of different music in different rooms. Even cooler: you can program up to 99 tracks, switching between the two decks at will with no waiting during the switching (using analog or digital outputs).

You can also customize your CDs by recording at either normal or double speed from the player deck to the recorder deck. Double-speed recording can only take place during internal digital dubbing, however. CDs made from analog or external digital sources--or discs made from copies of digital recordings (see the accompanying FAQ for more details)--must be made at single speed.

All recording falls into one of five categories. In any category, the process is the same: first select the type of recording you'll be making, then hit Record--it's pretty much as simple as that.

A category called MAKE CD will digitally record the CD in the playback tray at high speed and automatically finalize the disc (that is, prepare it for use in standard CD players) upon completion, coming as close as can be to one-touch recording.

RECORD FAST is similar, but will not finalize the disc, letting you add additional tracks at normal speed or material from a different source before completing the CD. RECORD LISTEN makes a digital recording at single speed, resulting in the most faithful sounding digital reproductions. RECORD EXTERNAL DISC will commence recording upon the CDR775's sensing of a digital signal from an external digital source, while the last method, RECORD EXTERNAL MANUAL, lets you tell the recorder when to begin recording from an external source, either analog or digital.

One thing this recorder does that may be unique to Philips recorders is to cancel a recorded track altogether if you hit stop within three seconds of initiating a recording. This prevents false starts (as when you miss the beginning of a track you're recording from vinyl or cassette) by letting you stop the recording and begin the track anew; other decks will record the glitch and offer no means for erasing or skipping it later.

We found the recorder to be finicky about the brand and duration of discs used. As with all component CD recorders, you must use designated "music" or "audio" CD-Rs and CD-RWs with the CDR775BK. We got the most consistently favorable results with 74-minute Memorex audio CD-Rs, though the recorder worked fine with most 80-minute Memorex discs as well (occasional discs would record but refuse to finalize).

A headphone jack is a huge convenience, but for some reason Philips neglected to supply a volume control for it, so you're stuck with a single (to our ears) very loud output.

Other drawbacks include downright strange sound from the standard analog stereo outputs (bloated bass and tizzy treble) and the absence of a fade-in/-out button (forcing you to record from the analog inputs and perform manual fades if you want smooth transitions on cuts from live albums or if you want to squeeze a three-minute song onto the end of a disc with only 2:45 remaining).

Nevertheless, given everything the CDR775 does--and the price at which it does it--this CD recorder makes an exciting production tool for the inner DJ in all of us. --Michael Mikesell

Pros:

  • Continuous play (deck 1 to deck 2)
  • 99-track programming across both discs
  • High-quality analog-to-digital converters
  • Will cancel a mistake if recording is stopped within 3 seconds
  • High-speed dubbing
  • Headphone jack
  • Independent digital outputs

Cons:

  • No volume control for headphone jack
  • No fade-in/-out command
  • Poor sound from analog outputs

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