if you are rtying to record from a music system, use twin phono out to 3.5mm jack in to the computer. Use Audacity. If you have that already, go to edit - preferences- Audio I/O and change to stereo there.
if you are rtying to record from a music system, use twin phono out to 3.5mm jack in to the computer. Use Audacity. If you have that already, go to edit - preferences- Audio I/O and change to stereo there.
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I am unfamiliar with the model even though I always wanted one...
Playing stereo needs two working channels, any mono/stereo switch moved to stereo, any channel balance/volume controls appropriately adjusted and most importantly the source material must be stereo - in the case of taped material it must have been recorded in stereo in order to replay in stereo...
Hello.....I have a unit similar to yours...and I never had that ptoblem...These units are cool and I love mine...but the cassette players are generally basic units...When you record are you listening to the music at the same time so that you know what's going on?....Ok....When you start the recording process....and you see the disc is rcording...and the cassette finished playing one side...you PAUSE the cd....Flip the tape....press the Pause again to restart the cd...I've never saw one of these types of uits with auto reverse...you have to flip the tape manualy...if you don't...you will only record half of the music....I hope this was helpful.....PEACE.......
This is because the G Track's Mic signal is on the Left channel and the Instrument signal is on the Right channel. You are making a stereo recording when you should be making 2 mono recordings. Does Nicecast have an option to set the track to mono Left channel? Traktor should, but I haven't used it so I can't tell you where the option is. There's probably a Track Input drop-down or something like that.
In all likelihood, you issue is in your recording software settings. If check the help files included with the program (hit the F1 key to pull these up) and search for stereo, I bet you find a setting on the software is set to mono. The second spot to look is in Control panel> Sounds and Audio devices> Audio tab. Click Advanced... under Sound Recording. See what control options are available to you since they differ from one audio app to another. This should bring up the setting for your audio input, look for a setting that says stereo or mono.
The answer is a year late, but yes, you can connect a phone or tape and even a recorder using the RCA plugs on the back of the unit. The tape input can be use to connect your stereo system so you have a whole house music system. The music will of course be in mono but the sound quality comes our better.
Make sure the phonograph is connected to the Phono Connectors. Hook up your CD recorder to the tape. The play connectors on the CD recorders can connect to the tape play connectors on your stereo. The record connectors on your CD recorder connect to the record outputs on the tape connectors on your stereo. You can also connect you CD recorder to the VCR connectors if you are using an audio tape as your source. All of the outputs and inputs are the same level except the phono.
Yes, the input is stereo BUT you need to configure Audacity to do the stereo capture. Go to File > Preferences. Once in the preferences dialog, go to the third Drop-down menu, and change from MONO to 2-channel stereo. That is.
I'm assuming you are plugging the left and right outputs from the karaoke machine into input A and B of the Tascam to record the stereo output of the Karioke. The Tascam works with mono only (you recreate the stereo mix at mixdown or when bouncing mono tracks together with the panning set). Therefore you should be assigning inputs A and B separately. You could press assign A and then the record button above track 1 and then press assign B and the record button above track 2. Then arm tracks 1 and 2 (by pressing record above each). When you then press play and record together you'll record input A onto track 1 and input B onto track 2.
The 788 can be used to play music from a SCSI attached CD-RW drive, but the record (and all other mixing functions) are disabled so you are not able to record the CD output onto a track using the SCSI attached drive.
Your options are:
1.) Rip tracks files from the CD onto you PC as wav files. You'll have rip (or later convert) those files to mono 16 or 24 bit wav files at 44.1kHz, use the old dos 8.3 naming convention for the filenames, and them burn them onto a CD-R or CD-RW as data files which can then be taken and imported into the 788.
2.) Play the CD through with an external CD player or stereo and route the output into an input on the 788. Assign the input to a track and record. Be careful to use a line level output, like an aux out (or try the CD player's outputs directly into the 788) if you are using a stereo. Avoid using a speaker output as the signal from a speaker output will be too strong and can damage the 788.
the problem is you are only recording on one side if you are using only one source, try using dual mics (with a audio interface with at least 2 inputs) or just record your tracks in stereo, then change the playback prefference to mono for listening purposes, then change back to stereo before mixdown
if you are rtying to record from a music system, use twin phono out to 3.5mm jack in to the computer. Use Audacity. If you have that already, go to edit - preferences- Audio I/O and change to stereo there.
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