![]() ![]() I’m assuming the receiver has a 1/4-inch headphone jack. The next thing I’d try is a Headphone Adapter. But of course, DON"T TOUCH the AC power if it’s plugged in! There might be a wire soldered to the RCA output that you can trace to another internal connector and maybe there’s some corrosion on the internal connector that can be scrapped-off, or maybe just un-plugging it and plugging it in again will fix it… You can try opening-up the receiver to take a look and maybe wiggle some wires. But even a simple repair will have a minimum labor charge if you can’t do it yourself. It’s probably a simple problem (a bad RCA jack or a broken/bad internal connection) since the receiver is otherwise working in full-stereo. It’s looking like your receiver has a problem. (There’s more than one thing sold as an “EZ-cap” so I have an idea of what you have but I’m not 100% sure.)Īm getting sound out of both regular speakers,Īnd that tells us the turntable and the connection to the receiver is OK. I’m assuming there is a stereo pair on the receiver and on the EZ-cap. There is only one RCA type plug to the receiver. If one of the RCA outputs on the receiver is bad another option is using the headphone-output (with the appropriate adapter/cable, of course). Hopefully, it’s the cable… You might have to switch both-ends of the cable (red-to-white and white-to-red on both ends) to figure-out if the cable is bad. That’s the connection between the receiver and the EZ-cap, right? That tells us the EZ-Cap & computer are capable of recording the right channel so the problem is either the receiver not putting-out a right-channel signal, or you’ve got a bad cable. Only difference is audio was recorded in right channel instead of left. Tried reversing stereo channels in Audacity. If you happen to run-across a record like that, make a note and save it as a “test record”. There is at least one Beatles record like that and I think there is a Mama’s & Papa’s mixed like that. There are few early stereo records with “weird stereo” where the vocals are on one side and instruments on the other. CDs are “different” because they are always 2-channels and on mono CDs the left & right audio is identical. Or if you play a stereo source on a mono system the left & right channels are mixed together. And everything (analog & digital) is mono-stereo compatible so a mono track plays-back through both speakers. …Just FYI - A true-mono is only one track, not separate left & right tracks with the same audio. Yeah, that’s worse than regular mono because you’re probably only recording one channel and the sound from the other channel is lost. I have used the suggested fixes (splitting stereo etc) so I can hear music from both ear phones but this is simply a mono signal for each channel. Make sure that Audacity AND Windows are BOTH configured for stereo. My question is “With this setup, is it possible to record in stereo and get a true stereo recording that will play in both channels? If so, how is it done, and if not, should I be recording in Mono in spite of the fact that the manual tells me to record in stereo”? If I use the second option will my MP3 play in both earphones? Also I can only “fix” one song at a time. When I transfer music to MP3 player however, I get sound in left ear only. Can not find a way to record in both channels. The recording appears in the upper (left) channel only. ![]() In Audacity, I’m using software playthrough and the stereo recording option (which is what Audacity manual suggests). I have copied many stereo LPs to my computer using Audacity 3.0.0 on a Windows 10 laptop.Īm using a USB audio capture device (EZ Cap) which supports stereo, via a Yamaha 2 channel stereo receiver. This is probably not a new topic but I haven’t seen a satisfactory answer to the problem.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |