I've been using DC Five now since it came out and am very happy with it. I've read about the new features in Six, but don't see a compelling reason to upgrade. Could some users out there with some experience with both please comment? I also think DC-Five users should only have to upgrade for $59.
I'm using a Echo Audio Gina sound card with breakout box and bringing in a signal from my Rega P3 turntable, Audio Technica OC9ML/II cartridge & Adcom GFP-555 preamp. Most of my albums are near-mint to mint, so I usually only have to manually edit out the occasional pop. When I do have to resort to the noise reduction filter, I typically make three passes at hi, med, and lo size settings. I also use the Five to simulate stereo for monaural piano recordings. Some day I'll spring for a new mic.
I have had a rare problem with the system freezing, particulary when I record continuously for a long period of time. I'm running Win2K on an Athlon 2000 (tbird) and Asus K7M266 (AMD northbridge, Via southbridge). I suspect this may be a PCI latency issue, and since cutting the Gina card and video (nVidia G2) latency from 184 and 255 respectively to 128 (using a freeware utility called LtcyCfg.exe), I haven't had the problem. Since it froze only rarely, I need to run like this a few more hours to be sure, however.
Lastly, I wonder if anyone has gone for Tracer-Tek's new flat recording concept? Seems to me you could simply buy the test album and digitally line out any system from that. I'm not sure why you'd need to change out the hardware first (e.g. pre-amps without RIAA filters).
Well I didn't intend to write an entire treatise, but there it is. I'm sure this will fire up the clamoring hordes of posters here to new heights of gregariousness.
Regards,
eCo
I'm using a Echo Audio Gina sound card with breakout box and bringing in a signal from my Rega P3 turntable, Audio Technica OC9ML/II cartridge & Adcom GFP-555 preamp. Most of my albums are near-mint to mint, so I usually only have to manually edit out the occasional pop. When I do have to resort to the noise reduction filter, I typically make three passes at hi, med, and lo size settings. I also use the Five to simulate stereo for monaural piano recordings. Some day I'll spring for a new mic.
I have had a rare problem with the system freezing, particulary when I record continuously for a long period of time. I'm running Win2K on an Athlon 2000 (tbird) and Asus K7M266 (AMD northbridge, Via southbridge). I suspect this may be a PCI latency issue, and since cutting the Gina card and video (nVidia G2) latency from 184 and 255 respectively to 128 (using a freeware utility called LtcyCfg.exe), I haven't had the problem. Since it froze only rarely, I need to run like this a few more hours to be sure, however.
Lastly, I wonder if anyone has gone for Tracer-Tek's new flat recording concept? Seems to me you could simply buy the test album and digitally line out any system from that. I'm not sure why you'd need to change out the hardware first (e.g. pre-amps without RIAA filters).
Well I didn't intend to write an entire treatise, but there it is. I'm sure this will fire up the clamoring hordes of posters here to new heights of gregariousness.
Regards,
eCo
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