by don ward <dward7@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
Jun 13, 2008 at 09:35 PM
One of the least expensive with a reasonable set of effects and
restoration tools comes from DAK 2000.
For more professional software I use Diamond Cut DC 5 that costs about
$200 with all kinds of "tools" for record restoration.
If you want to assemble some of your own go for Click repair and noise
reduction get them from Brian Davies "Brian.Davies@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
" they
are $20/30 each and work great. In some ways better than the $200
DC7.
Hope this helps
dnw
In article
<491438b2-d12f-4be3-b688-198b390a78f8@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
Bryan <Totalrod2@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> Can anyone here give me some recommendations for audio software? I've
> been using Audacity for over a month now to rip my record collection
> to CD's and I like the fact that it's free. But I'm finding the
> program somewhat limiting as far as equalization and adding reverb is
> concerned. It doesn't work in realtime. So you must first make the
> edit THEN see how it sounds. I did this nearly a dozen times and still
> couldn't get the sound I wanted. What I need is an "equalizer" and
> reverb that I can adjust while listening to the track. Any software
> recomendations?
> Bryan