I don't know any other way to put this except to say that sometimes when I record audio from an LP and play it back, it's "jerky". Almost like listening to someone stutter really, really fast. I have 2Gb of ram running on a 2.8Ghz dual core system running XP Pro. Thinking it might be a system resource thing, I rebooted and shut down all applications in the system try and got one good recording. I tried to record another LP and when I played it back ... there it was, back again.
Help?
Thanks.
Robert
Page 1 of 1
Jerky Audio recording of LP
#2
Posted 24 March 2007 - 03:38 PM
QUOTE (robert_k_brown @ Mar 24 2007, 06:14 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
I don't know any other way to put this except to say that sometimes when I record audio from an LP and play it back, it's "jerky". Almost like listening to someone stutter really, really fast. I have 2Gb of ram running on a 2.8Ghz dual core system running XP Pro. Thinking it might be a system resource thing, I rebooted and shut down all applications in the system try and got one good recording. I tried to record another LP and when I played it back ... there it was, back again.
Help?
Thanks.
Robert
Help?
Thanks.
Robert
Audio card or on board chip? Update the drivers and then play around with the audio acceleration using Windows Start Run dxdiag.
PC Windows 7 Ultimate 64bit
Velocity Micro ProMagix ©HD 60; evga x58 motherboard, Intel i7 @2.93, 6G RAM, EVGA Nvidia 560TI superclocked video card, SoundBlaster X-Fi Xtreme audio card, Buffalo external blu-ray burner; Creator 2011.
Laptop - Windows 7 Home
Dell XPS 1645, Intel I7 1,6G with overdrive ,4G RAM, 1 GB ATI Mobility Radeon HD 5730, Sound Blaster X-Fi MB Panzer, 500G hard drive.
Apple =OSX 10.5
MacBook Pro; 15.4-inch widescreen display, 2.4GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 2GB memory, 200GB hard drive, 8x SuperDrive (DVD±R DL/DVD±RW/CD-RW), NVIDIA GeForce 8600M GT with 256MB of GDDR3 memory. ILife 08, Toast 10, Final Cut Express 4 and Photoshop 4.
Velocity Micro ProMagix ©HD 60; evga x58 motherboard, Intel i7 @2.93, 6G RAM, EVGA Nvidia 560TI superclocked video card, SoundBlaster X-Fi Xtreme audio card, Buffalo external blu-ray burner; Creator 2011.
Laptop - Windows 7 Home
Dell XPS 1645, Intel I7 1,6G with overdrive ,4G RAM, 1 GB ATI Mobility Radeon HD 5730, Sound Blaster X-Fi MB Panzer, 500G hard drive.
Apple =OSX 10.5
MacBook Pro; 15.4-inch widescreen display, 2.4GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 2GB memory, 200GB hard drive, 8x SuperDrive (DVD±R DL/DVD±RW/CD-RW), NVIDIA GeForce 8600M GT with 256MB of GDDR3 memory. ILife 08, Toast 10, Final Cut Express 4 and Photoshop 4.
#3
Posted 25 March 2007 - 10:39 AM
How are you recording ('what you hear', line in, anlaog mix...)?
Does your sound card have any sound effects capabilities? If so are any enabled? they could cause a kind of echo in the recording.
Does your sound card have any sound effects capabilities? If so are any enabled? they could cause a kind of echo in the recording.
Dell XPS630i. Chipset: nVIDIA nForce 650i SLI. CPU: Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 2.4 GHz. RAM: 3 GB (DDR2-800 DDR2 SDRAM). Hard drives: 2x WD25 00AAJS-75VWA 250GB SATA. Video: NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT 512 MB. Audio: Audigy 2 (Dell OEM). DVD RW drives: Liteon iHAS234, HL-DT-ST DVD+-RW GSA-H73N. All drivers and firmware up to date.
XP Pro SP3 , IE 8, WMP 11, all updates. Creator 2011 Pro.
XP Pro SP3 , IE 8, WMP 11, all updates. Creator 2011 Pro.
Share this topic:
Page 1 of 1

Help
Roxio Community





