How to put records on CD's?


A freind of mine called me and asked if I could put some albums on CD's. He has a guy at work that has some old big band records that he would like to play in his car(and I would love some new music). I hadn't even considered this before, but now my interest is peaking. I have a Music Hall MMF-5 with the Shure xmr15 cart. I do have a computer at home with a Cd burner. Can I make CD's with this equipment or do I need a realtime CD burner? Anyone had much luck with this?
jdodmead
While this technology is built into most stand-alone CD burners and works fine; for the best results you could get a separate Analog to Digital Converter. This is the reverse of a DAC (Digital to Analog Converter) used to play CD's.

To use the computer, you would probably need the A/D converter or a special PCI card for your computer that does the same thing.
After a lot of experimenting, I'm doing LP to CD transfers with excellent results. In my view, the project has three stages: 1) Extracting the analog information and converting it into a digital file as accurately as possible; 2) Cleaning up surface noise; and 3) Burning a high-quality CD. Here is my process:

1. First, the record is cleaned with a VPI 16.5. I play it on a Harman Kardon T60 turntable + Grado Prestige Gold cartridge connected to a Parasound P/HP-850 preamp. The preamp is connected to a Turtle Beach Santa Cruz sound card in my computer. This card is highly regarded by some for its analog-to-digital conversion accuracy. For recording, I use Audio View 32, an application bundled with the sound card. Before making the final recording, I play a few tracks to monitor and set record levels. The objective is to get the record level as high as possible without going into the red and distorting the recording. When I used to make cassettes, I could get away with this, but not so with a CD. I record each side of the album as a single WAV file. You can do the entire album as a single file, but if your computer has a slow CPU, manipulating a file that large can seem slow.

2. Next is the most critical part of the process -- cleaning the recording. I use an outstanding shareware application called Wave Corrector 2.4 (http://www.wavecor.co.uk) to remove clicks and pops. This app does a far better job than anything else I've tried. It's not a sonic filter -- it repairs the file by altering the wave form. Its automatic mode does a great job but also allows full manual editing of the wave form. This can be tedious, but it's highly effective for repairing surface noise too similar to the underlying music for Wave Corrector to discern. All this is done without subtracting music information. At this stage, I break up the WAV file into tracks. WC can do fade-outs and fade-ins for tracks that flow into each other, if I want to break them up.

3. Now I burn the clean tracks on to a high-quality blank CD. I use a Yamaha CRW-F1 burner with Nero 5.5 as the burning application. The CRW-F1 is optimized for music burning (see Yamaha's web site for details).

The result is (in my opinion) a CD that sounds as good as any mainstream CD recording out there and better than most of them. Obviously, the variables in the process -- the quality and condition of the hardware and the vinyl, the cleanup job -- will have an effect for better or worse. But even with a setup like the one I described, the results can be amazing.
Don's process must get great results. I use the Roxio Software on my Macintosh computer and get really good results. I loaded the PC version of Roxio into an office computer and, while it is still good, the process is quite coumbersome. I you don't feel like going to the lengths that Don does, you might try this.
I have done similar to what Don does, with different, higher-end software that I can access through my work. The results are very good. Then, I bought a Denon CD deck with burner that my son uses as a playback device and burner. I run it through my rig sending the analog signal straight into the Denon which has a feature that automatically creates a new track for each song based on "quiet time" between songs. If one wants to manually intitate a track break, it is also easy to do. For good clean records without a lot of surface noise, I find the quality of the resultant CD's to be equal to, if not better than, those burned on the PC, albiet no noise reduction capabilites.

If you have low noise LP's to burn, the $500 retail ($390 street) cost of the Denon may be cheaper than investing in software.