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file splitter ?

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  • Unregistered

    file splitter ?

    I am extraordinarily happy with dbPowerAmp, Converter, Power Pack and Audio Player. Simply, this is the best set of music utilities I have found to date. Thank you to Spoon and whoever else are the developers for creating this package, and for making it available at such a reasonable price :o) Also, thanks to TechTV, had it not been for their plug, I might never have found your exceptional program.

    dmc Auxiliary Input has allowed me to do something that I've wanted to do for years: convert my collection of live recordings from audio casettes to digital music files and make them available to the world.

    Here is my wish: my casette tapes are typically 45 minutes per side. Rather than sitting at the PC and trying to compute the timing between songs . . . I would like to be able to record each side as one large file, and then split it in the appropriate places to make each song a separate file.

    I admit, I'm not a techie. Perhaps, I've missed a simple way to do this that is already available. I am certain I can find other software to do this. . . I may even have something on my PC. . . but I would like to be able to do that from within the db family of programs. . .

    Thank you,
    Michael S. Schreiber
  • Spoon
    Administrator
    • Apr 2002
    • 44509

    #2
    Re: file splitter ?

    Ideally you would record to Wave then load it into a Sound Editing program (I like SoundEngine, free), and split from there - but (there always is ) 45 minutes of CD Quality recording would be just under 500MB, so you would need a reasonable PC to edit that (ideally with 512MB of memory).
    Spoon
    www.dbpoweramp.com

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    • Unregistered

      #3
      Re: file splitter ?

      Spoon:

      Many thanks for your reply. I will take a look for Sound Engine as you suggested.

      Happily, memory is not an issue (PC Games requires monster performance). That much tech I understand

      Michael S.

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      • Razgo
        Administrator
        • Apr 2002
        • 2532

        #4
        Re: file splitter ?

        Here is my wish: my casette tapes are typically 45 minutes per side. Rather than sitting at the PC and trying to compute the timing between songs . . .
        have you tired the start and stop signal sensativity recording in auxiliary options? that way it will auto split all the tracks.

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        • Unregistered

          #5
          Re: file splitter ?

          Don't record to WAV, record to MP3. Then use a free MP3 editor called MP3DirectCut (Just Google it). It lets you (among other things) split an MP3 file into multiple parts without having to decode and re-encode it, so there is NO loss of quality, and it is FAST.

          I have recorded hundreds of cassette tapes using DMC and Auxiliary Input, and split them using MP3DirectCut. Works like a champ.

          Auto track splitting using Auxiliary Input is hard to do with cassette tapes because there usually isn't enough quiet gap between songs to reliably detect it.

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          • donp

            • Jun 2003
            • 9

            #6
            Re: file splitter ?

            The easiest wave file splitter I have found is CDwave (www.cdwave.com). I first used it on a 165 mhz pentium with 80 mb of memory, so it doesn't seem to need the whole file in memory at once.

            Mp3directcut has a bit rougher learning curve but is the thing to use if your original file is already mp3.

            I haven't had good luck with anyones automatic split by silence detection. Songs that trail off gradually always seem to get the ends cut off.

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            • Unregistered

              #7
              Re: file splitter ?

              Originally posted by donp
              The easiest wave file splitter I have found is CDwave (www.cdwave.com). I first used it on a 165 mhz pentium with 80 mb of memory, so it doesn't seem to need the whole file in memory at once.
              I tested it on a 486-66 machine with 20 MB and it runs just fine on that one too - no problem recording CD quality on an ancient ISA soundcard to a dinosaur disk, not even big enough to hold the whole recording . . .
              This machine is incapable of MP3 playback at 128kbit, by the way...

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