I have an old USB cassette player ( looks a bit like an old walkman). I plug it into my Macbook Pro (running Catalina 10.15.3), go into System Preferences/Sound and I select the USB audio device and the Input Level is showing the Mac receiving the audio and it playing through. However I can't hear any audio through my Mac through it's speakers or through my headphones. Everything else works fine (playing any other music in Spotify, Itunes, Youtube). I open Audacity and there's no signal or any music playing through that either. So weird, I can see the signal that goes up and down with the music (on my Macbook) but can't hear any sound.
Tweet Features: Rediscover your old cassette tapes on the go
Convert your old mix tapes and cassette to MP3 to Playback on iPod/MP3 platter or burn to CD
Portable design fits in virtually any bag and enables you to play and transfer anywhere
Used as walkman, you can connect to headphone, hi-fi or other speaker system
Plug and Play USB device, no drivers required
Power by USB or 2 x AA Batteries (Batteries are NOT included)
Comes with Tape Converter software to guide you through transfer
Audio output enables you to listen on your stereo, Headphones, or other speaker system
Dimension: 110 x 29 x 84mm (approx.)
Weight: 172g
System Requirements: One available USB 2.0 port, Pentium 4 CPU or above
512MB RAM or above, 1GB free HDD space
CD-ROM for installation
Windows 10 / 8 / 7 / Vista / XP and Mac OSX 10.5 or above
Package Contents: USB Cassette Capture & Player
USB Cable
USB Power Cable
User's Manual
CD Driver
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How To Use Super Usb Cassette Capture For Mac
Download: https://urlca.com/2vGh0W
USB audio devices connect to the computer's USB port and are used to transfer records, or tapes, to digital audio files (from which audio CDs can be burnt). This is very useful if your computer does not have the necessary line-in port for digitizing LPs or cassettes with a conventional turntable or tape deck. USB turntables often include a line input to which standard tape decks or similar sources can be connected for transfer to the computer.
Some users with extensive experience of digitizing LPs and tapes believe that connecting a good quality conventional turntable or tape deck to an external USB audio interface is an ideal solution. USB audio interfaces usually do not suffer from the transmission problems of USB turntables or tape decks, and are also free from the random clicky noise that can afflict sound devices built into computer motherboards. Moreover their analog-to-digital converter (ADC) may be superior to that provided with a USB turntable
Once your USB turntable or cassette deck is set up and working properly, go to the Basic Recording, Editing and Exporting section of our Tutorial - Copying tapes, LPs or MiniDiscs to CD for instructions on how to:
-Rediscover your cassette tapes on the go-Convert your mix tapes and cassette to MP3 to Playback on MP3 player or burn to CD-Portable design fits in virtually any bag and enables you to play and transfer anywhere-Flexible battery or USB-powered operation-Comes with tape converter software to guide you through transfer-Audio output enables you to listen on your stereo, headphones, or other speaker system
While sometimes it may seem as though all of recorded music is available by a quick search on services such as Spotify, Google Play, or iTunes (to name just three), the truth is that a significant amount of recorded music is only available in analog formats, such as cassette tapes. So, whether your interest is in digitizing cassettes from childhood or a mix tape from an old high-school flame, B&H has a range of solutions to help you enjoy your analog music in a convenient digital format.
There are two approaches to digitizing cassette tapes. The first is to buy a cassette player or combination media player that includes a CD burner or USB sound card with software for recording to a computer.
For users also interested in digitizing their cassette collection to CDs or USB flash media without the need for a computer, take a look at the TEAC AD-RW900-B CD Recorder with Cassette Deck and USB Port.
Connecting your cassette player to your audio interface, field recorder, or internal soundcard will depend on the input and output connectors of the respective devices. These may be stereo 3.5mm line level connectors or a pair of unbalanced RCA connectors. Fortunately, B&H offers an extensive catalog of cables and adapters for connecting your equipment so you can accomplish your goal.
Hello, I work for a company that has an old box of cassette tapes that we want to convert to digital. There are about 600 of them including about 150 mirco sized. What device would be the best for our situation?
I was organizing my house and came across my vocal performances done for my music major, concentratong in vocal performance during my late teens / early twenties on cassettes. My son wants me to have them digitalized to pass on through our generations. Should I send them off to be handled professionally? What would be an estimated cost? If I endeavored to do it on my own, what would I need and what would be my cost for that?
Hi, I've recorded some demos directly onto cassette tape by playing into my sennheiser mic through my steinberg interface. When digitizing again, it sounds very gainey - do you know why that is? Is it to do with the way I'm recording onto the cassette?
You may want to connect your cassette player directly to the interface instead of recording analog from the microphone, thereby eliminating another step in the audio chain. The results should improve.
Hi friends. I'm digitizing cassettes of live shows as part of an archiving project for my former duo. Using a Denon DRM-740 deck, going through a Focusrite 2i2 into a first gen iPad pro with Auria. I could not get a good sound running 2 RCAs from the deck into my two 1/4" inputs -- there was a weird flangy sound and it seemed like half the sound just dropped out. In the end, just using the L out and one channel sounded the best but I'm a bit stymied. Any ideas? Thanks so much!
So I also have many audio cassettes to digitize onto my IMAC. I want high quality WAV files at up to 192kHz resolution. I have a Nakamichi cassette deck. I'm looking at the Berenger UCA202 and the Focusright Scarlet 2i2 as the interface. Do either of these provide a WAV file I am looking for? Or do I convert the files to WAV once they are digitized into my IMAC? Thanks, Scott
I have several albums that were only released to cassette, that I'm hoping to digitize *losslessly*, without spending a fortune. I don't currently own a cassette deck. I've already purchased a USB audio capture cable to use with Audacity on my iMac, but am wondering if I can buy a cheap walkman-style replica, or if I'll need something like an old cabinet-style cassette deck to do this properly. Any help would be appreciated.
I want to digitize cassettes. I used an aux to aux plug from my JVC TD-W354 cassette deck phone port to the headphone port of my 2013 Imac and Adobe Audition software. I left my stereo amp on and the sound played through the speakers. It worked and the sound is decent except there are cracks and pops that I did not hear through my speakers. After researching, it sounds like the headphone to headphone connection is not a great idea. I do not have a sound card in the computer. If I get the Behringer Interface you recommend, can I still use the Adobe Audition software? I notice the Behringer is 16-Bit; I was using 32-bit float in Audition when recording. 2ff7e9595c
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