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  • Capture audio cassette

    I have Edius 5.12 without HD Storm Bay. How would one capture analog audio cassette tapes into Edius? I tried feeding cassette player into a digital deck and then firewire into system but no luck.
    Thanks,
    Ara

    Windows 10 Home 64 Bit, Edius WG 9.55.7303, Edius X WG 10.20.7490 Intel Z370X Motherboard, i7-8700K 4.7 GHz 6 core, 12 Thread LGA-1151 CPU, GTX-1080 8GB Graphics card, 500GB M.2 PCIe NVM SSD, 16 TB Raid 0 Media Drive, 32 GB DDR4 Memory, Intensity Pro 4K AV I/O, CS 5.51 Production Suite.

  • #2
    use the analogue audio inputs from the cassette player and click audio capture (not video capture)

    a stable video signal needs to be present for audio capture to become active, camera with less cap on will do

    if you don't have an audio capture button, you can add it by customizing the player buttons
    Anton Strauss
    Antons Video Productions - Sydney

    EDIUS X WG with BM Mini Monitor 4k and BM Mini Recorder, Gigabyte X299 UD4 Pro, Intel Core i9 9960X 16 Core, 32 Threads @ 4.3Ghz, Corsair Water Cooling, Gigabyte RTX-2070 Super 3X 8GB Video Card, Samsung 860 Pro 512GB SSD for System, 8TB Samsung Raid0 SSD for Video, 2 Pioneer BDR-209 Blu-ray/DVD burners, Hotswap Bay for 3.5" Sata and 2.5" SSD, Phanteks Enthoo Pro XL Tower, Corsair 32GB DDR4 Ram, Win10 Pro

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    • #3
      When you say you have fed the audio into a digital deck, but no luck with Firewire, do you mean trying a pass thru?

      To get the input to work in this way I suspect that a video signal is necessary. If you try recording the audio on to a tape so that it records a blank video but with audio, you should then be able to capture this in Edius.

      Not an elegant way to do it, but it should work.

      Can you not record the audio cassette to the PC as a WAV file using the line input of the audio card and a program like Audacity or even Windows recorder?


      Then just import the audio file.


      UPDATE:

      Just seen that Anton had beaten me to a reply.
      Edius 8.53WG, Vistitle 2.8, Windows 10 x64 Pro Fall Update, Asus Z87 Pro, Intel i7-4770K, 16 GB 1600 Corsair Vengence LP RAM, Samsung 840 Pro SSD 256GB, WD Black 2TB media drive, Intel HD 4600 GPU, MSI GTX660 2GB VGA, Coolermaster Silencio 652 case, Noctua NH-U12S CPU cooler, Cakewalk UA-25EX USB audio interface, Cakewalk MA-15D monitor speakers, BM Intensity Pro 4K, PlextorPX-LB950SA BD writer, Dell U2410 Monitor

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      • #4
        Originally posted by antonsvideo
        use the analogue audio inputs from the cassette player and click audio capture (not video capture)

        a stable video signal needs to be present for audio capture to become active, camera with less cap on will do

        if you don't have an audio capture button, you can add it by customizing the player buttons
        Anton,

        I do not have a video input. All I have is firewire or e-sata. Maybe I can use line input on the back of the PC?
        Thanks,
        Ara

        Windows 10 Home 64 Bit, Edius WG 9.55.7303, Edius X WG 10.20.7490 Intel Z370X Motherboard, i7-8700K 4.7 GHz 6 core, 12 Thread LGA-1151 CPU, GTX-1080 8GB Graphics card, 500GB M.2 PCIe NVM SSD, 16 TB Raid 0 Media Drive, 32 GB DDR4 Memory, Intensity Pro 4K AV I/O, CS 5.51 Production Suite.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by John Hooper
          Can you not record the audio cassette to the PC as a WAV file using the line input of the audio card and a program like Audacity or even Windows recorder?
          John,

          I will give that a try.
          Thanks,
          Ara

          Windows 10 Home 64 Bit, Edius WG 9.55.7303, Edius X WG 10.20.7490 Intel Z370X Motherboard, i7-8700K 4.7 GHz 6 core, 12 Thread LGA-1151 CPU, GTX-1080 8GB Graphics card, 500GB M.2 PCIe NVM SSD, 16 TB Raid 0 Media Drive, 32 GB DDR4 Memory, Intensity Pro 4K AV I/O, CS 5.51 Production Suite.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by ajcvideo
            Anton,

            I do not have a video input. All I have is firewire or e-sata. Maybe I can use line input on the back of the PC?
            I misread your original post and assumed you have the bay
            Anton Strauss
            Antons Video Productions - Sydney

            EDIUS X WG with BM Mini Monitor 4k and BM Mini Recorder, Gigabyte X299 UD4 Pro, Intel Core i9 9960X 16 Core, 32 Threads @ 4.3Ghz, Corsair Water Cooling, Gigabyte RTX-2070 Super 3X 8GB Video Card, Samsung 860 Pro 512GB SSD for System, 8TB Samsung Raid0 SSD for Video, 2 Pioneer BDR-209 Blu-ray/DVD burners, Hotswap Bay for 3.5" Sata and 2.5" SSD, Phanteks Enthoo Pro XL Tower, Corsair 32GB DDR4 Ram, Win10 Pro

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by ajcvideo
              I have Edius 5.12 without HD Storm Bay. How would one capture analog audio cassette tapes into Edius? I tried feeding cassette player into a digital deck and then firewire into system but no luck.
              Why don't you just use Sound Recorder in Windows and then bring the WAV file into Edius. Just connect up to the "line in" on the sound card or motherboard, select music( to get highest data rate). Sound Recorder is under accessories>entertainment.
              I record audio into Sound Forge then bring into Edius.

              Ron Evans
              Ron Evans

              Threadripper 1920 stock clock 3.7, Gigabyte Designare X399 MB, 32G G.Skill 3200CL14, 500G M.2 NVME OS, 500G EVO 850 temp. 1T EVO 850 render, 16T Source, 2 x 1T NVME, MSI 1080Ti 11G , EVGA 850 G2, LG BLuray Burner, BM IP4K, WIN10 Pro, Shuttle Pro2

              ASUS PB328 monitor, BenQ BL2711U 4K preview monitor, EDIUS X, 9.5 WG, Vegas 18, Resolve Studio 18


              Cameras: GH5S, GH6, FDR-AX100, FDR-AX53, DJI OSMO Pocket, Atomos Ninja V x 2

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              • #8
                As noted above, recording the audio via the sound card in the PC is probably the fastest and simplest method.

                But be aware that typical analog cassette records/players do not have a precise time base and you may encounter variation in timing of the audio, especially if recorded on one machine and played on another. This could be an issue if you are trying to do accurate sound sync (e.g., maintain lip sync), especially on longer recordings.

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                • #9
                  My quick method is to plug a cassette deck's headphone out into the computer's mic/line input. You'll need to get the right patch cord or adapters. You should be able to use the EDIUS voice over tool to set a level and record. You may need line pads if you come out of the cassette decks RCA phono jacks. I've been using a garage band xlr - 1/8 inch cable to plug in micropones for direct audio recording to an editing laptop for location/news work.
                  Main - Edius Pro 9.55, Windows Pro 10 20H2, Lenovo Ideacentre 720-18APR, AMD Ryzen 7 2000 8 core 3.2 GHz, Radeon Rx560 4096 MB.

                  Dub - Edius Pro 9.55, IMac Windows 7 bootcamp, Sony MVMC-DA2 DV converter, Sony BVU 800, Sony BVW, Sony DCR-PC101, Sony GV-D800, Alesis MultiMix 8.

                  Old Cam - Panasonic HVX200 (DV100_1080/59.94i), AJ-PCD-10, P2 F series cards.

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