Jerry Barton wrote:

On Sun, 02 Nov 2003 01:08:20 +1100
Brian Parish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:




What you need to concentrate on then is setting the initial level so
that it's well below distortion on the peaks, but not too far. rezound or audacity include meters for displaying the record levels,
so using one of these to do the initial recording should allow you to
manipulate the input level until the meters are bouncing up to close
to the red zone on the loudest peaks. That way you are using close to
the full 96dB available for 16 bit recording - far greater than the
dynamic range on your original recording - and you should hear no
degradation of signal compared with the original.



In aumix increase the IGain. (or have you tried that already?)


Jerry



Thank you all for your replies, having to share my internet connection a
today, so not able to instantly reply.


I have re-recorded the audio tape into .wav files using gramofile
setting the cd/tapedeck player audio levels to a lower levels .

I have also thought about the synthesizer level and reset the
cd/tapedeck synthesizer level to maximum across the spread of the audio
spectrum . I'm thinking maybe the cd/tapedeck player is clipping the
range of the output too. Does that sound right ?


I will then play with the other apps to see what sound levels I can
increase too.

John

--
John Richard Smith
[EMAIL PROTECTED]




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