Kelly, I wish I wasn't in school at this time, I would have gladly done that
for you. I have done this type of things for friends in my studio. Sorry
about that, but I see your frustration.

Rod

MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
IM: Roddy12RA

===================
"For it is a very remarkable thing that there are no men, not even the
insane, so dull and stupid that they cannot put words together in a manner
to convey their thoughts." (Philosopher Descartes).

"No power on earth can stop an idea whose time has come."  Victor Hugo.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Kelly Pierce" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "PC audio discussion list. " <Pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Wednesday, April 20, 2005 8:04 PM
Subject: Re: backupping cassett tapes


> I'm just now getting around to this mammoth project.  I got really serious
> when I received a series of cassettes from my library on international
> library loan.  When I put cassette #3 into the machine, the tape came off
> the tape reel and the cassette was unusable.  Fortunately, they had made a
> backup copy of the cassettes, which they sent me after the long and
> predictable delays of mailing the defective cassette series back to the
> library, them mailing it back to the originating library and that library
> mailing a new series back to my local library.  I am quite fearful that
> playing a tape more than once might cause another problem.  Fortunately I
> had purchased Sound Forge 5.0 a few years ago when some online store was
> running a great special that tossed in the noise reduction bundle.  The
fear
> of another tape snafu motivated me to learn how to feed the tape output
into
> my computer, edit the blank space at the beginning and end of the
recording,
> and apply the noise reduction plug in to reduce dramatically the tape
hiss.
>
> Ideally, you would use Sound Forge with the noise reduction bundle so the
> tape hiss can be removed.
>
> the next project is a cassette tutorial I have.  last week a cassette from
> the tutorial
> got twisted in my tape player.  It was necessary to unscrew the cassette
and
> take it apart to reach the tape and flatten it out.  I may only have a few
> plays of this cassette before it self-destructs.  I am slowly getting
> annoyed with cassette technology and its hassles.
>
> Kelly
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Juan Hernandez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
> Sent: Wednesday, April 20, 2005 1:44 AM
> Subject: backupping cassett tapes
>
>
> Hello everyone,
>
> I hope everyone is well this evening.
>
> I just wanted to ask, I have some sets of 4-track cassetts that I would
like
> to record onto my computer.  I have a 4-track tape player, and a patch
> cable.  Now, what software and steps do I need to do to record these
> cassetts as clear as possible?  thanks to e veryone.
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