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Re: [ARSCLIST] USB Turntables



I agree with all of this.

For that many LPs, if you're really planning to transfer all of them to accessible digital copies, I'd actually go for a heavy duty turntable like the Technics 1200, a moderately priced broadcast-grade preamp and a CD recorder. Keep the computer out of it to save time. Treat it like making cassettes in the old days. If you're doing archival-preservation transfers, I'd go heavier duty, but for access copies, this method will work and be efficient. Figure a person could blast through 8-10 records a day with a lunch break, meaning it would take you a year or so to get thru the pile. I'd figure on at least 2 years to allow for a slower pace, down time and other issues.

Minimum equipment:

1. a record cleaning machine. You could get by with the $500 VPI (the manual brush, electric vacuum and turntable model).

2. a broadcast-grade turntable. I highly recommend the Technics 1200 but others have other preferences.

3. a good cartridge and you just as soon budget for a replacement stylus about midway thru the project if not sooner. Also note that you need a 78 stylus for 78 RPM records, but if your entire collection is LPs then and LP cartridge will do the trick alone.

4. a decent grade phono preamp. I'd suggest that you'd be in fine shape with something as simple as the Soundcraft Folio Notebook mini-mixer. That little unit actually has very good phono preamps in it and will be especially more than OK for spoken word material. Bonus is you can use it for other things around the studio, like transferring cassettes or reels and even cleaning up EQ on programs. You can go even simpler/cheaper with little phono preamps from a variety of manufacturers.

5. a decent grade CD recorder. Some line Denon, some like Tascam, some like hhb, take your pick. Buy a "professional" model that doesn't require those silly "audio CD blanks." Then you can use most types of standard CDR media. Now, I would keep a computer around for one purpose. Make a copy of the CD after you've recorded it. Circulate the copy. Keep the "master" on the shelf to make another copy once the first one gets lost, stolen or worn out.

This is the simplest way to do this I can think of and still get halfway decent quality. You can go super-extravagent beyond this but I don't think it would serve the goal you stated, to make this material accessible. I'd figure the equipment budget somewhere south of $5000 and figure it would be a full-time job for a couple of years to get all of that pile transferred.

-- Tom Fine

----- Original Message ----- From: "Jeffrey Kane" <jeffkane@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, March 24, 2008 2:03 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] USB Turntables



Check with them to make sure they used a phono preamp. It's not beyond the
realm of possibility that someone simply plugged a turntable directly into a
computer sound card. That would assuredly lead to horrid results as the
output is not only very low in level but also still carries RIAA
equalization which would sound very thin and shrill.  The Rolls VP29 is an
example of a very low cost phono preamp. Note that this isn't a
recommendation; that's simply one of the cheapest phono-pres I know of
that's readily available. I'd want something quite a bit better for
archiving.

The USB turntables are nothing more than a mediocre or worse turntable with
an RIAA preamplifier and Analog to Digital converter inside that outputs via
USB interface. In short, it's all in one convenient package but the quality
is not what one could achieve via more traditional methods.

Regardless of what method is used, you don't want LPs in the hands of
patrons, especially ones that can't be replaced.

-----Original Message-----
From: Association for Recorded Sound Discussion List
[mailto:ARSCLIST@xxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Christina Zamon
Sent: Monday, March 24, 2008 10:02 AM
To: ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] USB Turntables

Thanks Tom, good suggestion, but the reason we accepted this donation
was because these albums are not available on commercial CDs with the
exception of a few.  They are comedy LPs from the 1960s to the 1990s
that comprise half of the collection.  The total collection consists of
LPs and CDs and number close to 1500.

Thanks to everyone else for their suggestions.  I think I'm more
confused now then when I started.  I originally checked with our media
services department who had tried to convert some LPs about 5 or 6 years
ago using a regular turntable through a computer but they said that the
results were terrible.  They suggested I test the USB turntable as an
alternative to see if that works any better.  I've read mixed reviews on
using USB turntables vs. a regular turntable through a computer.
Everyone seems to have their own preference or reason for doing it one
way or another.

I'm still open to comments or suggestions on the topic. Thanks.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Christina J. Zamon
Head of Archives and Special Collections
Emerson College
120 Boylston Street
Boston, MA  02116
Tel: (617) 824-8679
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-----Original Message-----
From: Association for Recorded Sound Discussion List
[mailto:ARSCLIST@xxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Tom Fine
Sent: Friday, March 21, 2008 7:55 PM
To: ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] USB Turntables

One key suggestion -- buy commercial CD's of everything that's in print.
You will avoid a very
sticky copyright issue and it will be much less expensive than any
reasonable method of transferring
LPs (if a transfer person's time is worth anything). See how much that
whittles down the number of
needed transfers and then you can make better decisions. More material
than you think was or is
in-print on CD's. If the collection is all or some classical music, also
make sure to check out the
ArkivCD reissues at www.arkivmusic.com

-- Tom Fine

----- Original Message ----- From: "Christina Zamon" <Christina_Zamon@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Friday, March 21, 2008 4:22 PM
Subject: [ARSCLIST] USB Turntables



Our archives recently received 800 LPs from a donor and we are looking into getting a turntable for access purposes. We would like to have a turntable that we can use for patrons to listen and for creating reference/service copies on to CD or into a digital file so as not to wear out or ruin the originals. I've looked at several USB turntables from Ion, Stanton, and Numark with various reviews and opinions. Is there anyone out there already doing something similar and what type of turntable are you using? We would like to spend less than $500.



Any suggestions?



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Christina J. Zamon

Head of Archives and Special Collections

Emerson College

120 Boylston Street

Boston, MA 02116

Tel: (617) 824-8679

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



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