Posted on 03/05/2008 7:27:31 PM PST by NormsRevenge
SAN FRANCISCO Most people gave up on their vinyl music collection two decades ago, when compact discs all but nudged LPs off store shelves for good.
If you held onto any favorites, DJ equipment maker Numark Inc. is looking to breathe new life into them with a USB-equipped turntable. It can pipe the tunes of yesteryear into your computer, where you can store them in digital form or load them onto a media player and take them on the road.
The Numark TTX USB ($399) is a sturdy, DJ quality turntable with well-fashioned components and nice styling. Nothing about this unit threatens to date it visually, and that's important if you're considering showcasing a turntable alongside some other home theater devices.
Most consumers succumbed to the power of digital music formats long ago. But now Numark is looking to breathe new life into your old vinyl collection. You now rip them directly to MP3s on your computer with Numark's USB-enabled turntable.
Numark was not the first company to market with a USB-equipped turntable. ION Audio also makes USB turntables, and theirs start at $99. But the heavy-duty build of the Numark unit was more impressive to me.
And it's always possible to skip such devices altogether and pipe the sound from your old, non-USB turntable into a computer. You can feed the audio signal into a USB-equipped mixer or use an add-on like Creative Technology Ltd.'s Sound Blaster PC cards with traditional left and right phono inputs.
The on-board USB connection just made the process easier for me. Numark is selling ease-of-use and top notch physical components with the TTX USB unit.
The Numark includes the software needed to import music from 33s and 45s to a computer hard drive. Once you plug the USB cable from the turntable into the computer and launch the application, it's as simple as pressing record and lowering the needle down onto the album surface.
Of course this is a real-time affair: There are no shortcuts to ripping vinyl to a digital file. If you want to convert 50 minutes of album music into MP3 format, it takes 50 minutes of recording plus a few minutes for the conversion and encoding, in contrast to the few minutes it takes to burn a CD with files already in digital form.
I invited a friend and her albums over for a Sunday afternoon of vinyl ripping. She brought a mish mash of good 1980s music, bad 1980s music and a few nicely remastered jazz albums to keep things respectable. Like me, she had kept her LPs, waiting for an opportunity like this to reinvent them in digital form.
The Numark unit faithfully replicated the music, along with the occasional crackle and hiss of a weathered album. The files were encoded as MP3s at 160 kilobits per second, slightly better than the default 128 kbps in most CD ripping programs.
The EZ Vinyl Converter program automatically puts the resulting MP3 files into an iTunes music folder, if you have iTunes installed.
There is software to remove or at least soften the cracks and hisses that can be heard on aging vinyl albums. Audacity can do a decent job and the software is free to download. Audio Cleaning Lab from Magix ($39.99) also has many tools for sprucing up sounds transferred from vinyl to digital format.
The tricky part came when I wanted to insert the track titles. One method was to lift the tone arm after the end of a song, effectively pausing the process and clicking next on the application, an action that took us to a screen to insert the track info. Doing that for a select number of album tracks was tedious. On some tracks I forgot and ended up with two songs in one MP3 file.
It's was easy enough to open those mistake MP3s in audio editing software, using the aforementioned Audacity program, and split the file in half to create two MP3s, one for each actual song.
I *knew* there was a reason to hang onto all my old LPs and 45s!! Woot! :-)
May have to give this a try. I have about 200 LPs in the basement. If they aren't all warped...
I can live without all the pops and crackles.
Sweet! Thanks for posting this. I’m of the age where the vinyl discs have music that will never be heard without them, now. I’m going to get this piece of equipment and transfer a.s.a.p. things I want my granddaughter to have someday.
Its 5 to one against you! ...and counting...
Click on my link.
Very interesting link!... The 78’s at 45, to CD at proper speed play option was interesting since I have 78’s of Lawrence Oliver doing Hamlet and nothing at 78 to play them on! I have a few 78 albums which I thought would never be heard again unless I gave them to my ex-wife to play on the ‘upright’ music box she got in the divorce.
Oh my, I left an “I” out of Sir Olivier’s name!
Very old news. USB turntables have been on the market for about a year and a half now. Most companies selling them have units retailing for around $119.95
ALL RIGHT!!! Now I can record all of my dad’s great albums!!
Count me with BOT. The only purpose I see for it is to rip old vinyl you can't find anywhere else into .mp3 format. And you could use an analog turntable for that. Just plug your amp output into the soundcard and run the turntable through the amp. Yeah, a pain if you had to do it every day but for a fews hours over the weekend to rip a couple dozen albums - piece of cake.
This device makes no sense to me. I already have a turntable. Why spend four hundred bucks for a new one only to make it obsolete by digitizing my lps? Also this doesn’t help me digitize my cassettes. And why should I be limited to MP3 quality? I don’t get it.
This should keep you busy for a decade or so.
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