thank you, astromo, great link! and thank you, dtc. I am very curious to manage this task.
Yep great post indeed.
Been using an ADL GT40a for A/D conversion along with Audacity and ASIO. It's free and reliable and you can get rid of clicks natively by using "Repair" under Effects. This can be really time consuming as it applies on very short samples but you have complete control on what is happening...And it's free!
(BTW I don't use the ADL phono preamp and use an external one.)
There's good tutorials in the help files of Audacity
There is a also a guide on Compiling the latest version of Audacity for ASIO as you can't download for legal reasons and a bit of a pain to compile but...IMHO it's worth it..
And once you get the hang of it, splitting and labeling tracks, exporting into FLAC or ALAC can all be done in Audacity (search for: splitting_a_recording_into_separate_tracks)
- In a nutshell I:
1. Record all the LP in one file (Need one big file to ensure you keep the same volume level for Step. #3)
2. Delete extra silence with some fade-in outs to clean out noise between tracks
3. (Sometimes I need to adjust the attenuation level on the ADC to avoid clipping: 0, 6 or 12 dB)
4. Repair Clicks (only big ones. I don't mind a few snap, crackle and pops
)
5. Normalise to maximise Dynamic Range without clipping
6. Split and label tracks
7. Export to ALAC
8. Run dBpoweramp for itunnorm
9. Import in MC
10. In MC I clean up tags, add cover art and run the audio analysis
Voila! This is fun!
I personally record in 44.1 KHz 16 bit. I don't see the point in going any higher as if I want high quality, I'll just listen to the vinyl anyway! (Or buy the Pro studio master equivalent