麻豆区 Vine Customer Review of Free Product( What's this? )
I received a sample KLIM K7 cassette player - cassette to digital converter. As a long time collector of audio going back to wire recorders, I thought I鈥檇 give this device a try. I have a large collection of cassettes amongst numerous other analog recorded mediums. I did do some conversions back in the nineties and found it painful. Zoom ahead to today鈥
The KLIM K7 player arrived and I was quite surprised what one got for the $60 package. The recorder/player, USB charging cable, headphones with magnetic connectors with four different size earpieces, lapel holder for earphone cable, 8 gig SD card, SD card reader and a humorous KLIM thank you and decal set.
For my first test of cassette to digital recorder I popped in a cassette (from 1982) and had a listen. It has been a long time since I had tape hiss in my ears. The earphones are good, the built in speaker is okay. But the real reason I got the machine was for the analog to digital conversion. Conversion is pretty straight forward, pop in the cassette (tape side up), press play then hit the record button. I had to leave the house and was a little leery about the size of the file I was going to get, 2 hours of blank audio after the music finished? I was totally surprised, the cassette finished and the recorder shut off! Whew鈥
The next step for me is to bring it into Adobe Audition or similar audio programme to cut the single file into individual tracks if desired. I do. Then I use MP3tag (free software) to put in all the pertinent information for each track. The MP3 tracks sound excellent in my first test. The MP3 is recorded at 160kbps, sample rate 44100Hz and 32bit.
On my second test, the cassette to digital recording finished then it played the digital recording afterward.
The KLIM K7 requires no space, has a 1000mAh rechargeable battery and can basically do a cassette to digital conversion anywhere and no babysitting the player/recorder, a bonus.
I received a sample KLIM K7 cassette player - cassette to digital converter. As a long time collector of audio going back to wire recorders, I thought I鈥檇 give this device a try. I have a large collection of cassettes amongst numerous other analog recorded mediums. I did do some conversions back in the nineties and found it painful. Zoom ahead to today鈥
The KLIM K7 player arrived and I was quite surprised what one got for the $60 package. The recorder/player, USB charging cable, headphones with magnetic connectors with four different size earpieces, lapel holder for earphone cable, 8 gig SD card, SD card reader and a humorous KLIM thank you and decal set.
For my first test of cassette to digital recorder I popped in a cassette (from 1982) and had a listen. It has been a long time since I had tape hiss in my ears. The earphones are good, the built in speaker is okay. But the real reason I got the machine was for the analog to digital conversion. Conversion is pretty straight forward, pop in the cassette (tape side up), press play then hit the record button. I had to leave the house and was a little leery about the size of the file I was going to get, 2 hours of blank audio after the music finished? I was totally surprised, the cassette finished and the recorder shut off! Whew鈥
The next step for me is to bring it into Adobe Audition or similar audio programme to cut the single file into individual tracks if desired. I do. Then I use MP3tag (free software) to put in all the pertinent information for each track. The MP3 tracks sound excellent in my first test. The MP3 is recorded at 160kbps, sample rate 44100Hz and 32bit.
On my second test, the cassette to digital recording finished then it played the digital recording afterward.
The KLIM K7 requires no space, has a 1000mAh rechargeable battery and can basically do a cassette to digital conversion anywhere and no babysitting the player/recorder, a bonus.