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In Reply to: RE: Digitizing and archiving vinyl posted by Jeff Starr on June 27, 2016 at 19:57:09:
The problem with DSD is you can not edit it. However, you can split it into individual songs and you can crop each side. Therefore, you can cut off the beginning that contains the noise from the stylus dropping on the record and you can cut off the end so it's not important if the stylus rides the run-out grove for five minutes at then end.
The DA-3000 does accept a USB flash drive, which can be used to export recorded files from its SDHC memory card or its CF memory card as well as playing music files. I rarely use my computer for streaming anymore because I simply copy the music files I want to play onto a 64-GB USB flash drive and plug it directly into the DA-3000. Then the DA-3000 becomes a stand-alone digital music player.
All recording must be done with either SDHC memory cards, which is what I use, or else CF memory cards. My Toshiba notebook computer has a SDHC port so I can transfer recorded files to my computer by removing the SDHC card and plugging it into my computer, which is very fast and convenient. Then I use the free TASCAM Hi-Res Editor software to crop and split my recordings into individual tracks.
For my purposes, the DA-3000 is an excellent DSD recorder and DSD player.
Best regards,
John Elison
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Follow Ups
- RE: Digitizing and archiving vinyl - John Elison 20:39:43 06/27/16 (0)