Hello, Frank. If you have Cdex or another sound editor you are comfortable with, then there is a good start. Also you must set up your volume control and select Line-in from the Windows Volume Control and then close that and do a test recording. If your sample has recorded onto your hard drive, you will hear it. If it did not, then the Line-In is not yet on. Anyway, I use Cdex and for cassettes and other formats I encode from I use the Record >From Analog Input feature in Cdex 1.5. Oh, yeah, don't forget your cables connected in the right place and one goes into the line-in on the sound card--and I usually monitor through headphones so have my headphones connectd to my sound card so I can regulate the volume. I cannot do it so well through the speakers, because then it ends up being too loud or too soft.
I havve two receivers connected together. One has a double cassette deck and the other one has more inputs on it so I can switch between four different sources. I thought I would need a mixer as well, but so far, have not necessitated a purchase of one. Hope this makes sense and hope it helps you. Mimi ----- Original Message ----- From: "Frank Deweese" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "PC audio discussion list. " <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Thursday, October 14, 2004 7:27 PM Subject: Copying cassettes to computer Hi folks, Is there any way I can copy cassettes to my computer? I have quite a few cassettes and would like to copy them. Any assistance would be appreciated. Frank ________________________________________ _______ PC-Audio List Help, Guidelines, Archives and more... http://www.pc-audio.org To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ PC-Audio List Help, Guidelines, Archives and more... http://www.pc-audio.org To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]