Converting Vinyl to Digital


I want to convert my many vinyl records to digital - preferably stored on a server. I am looking for the very best sound quality and a relatively simple process. Best equipment and/or methods??

zygat

“If you're looking for an activity or you have a special collection of very old rare vinyl, then this could be a great pursuit. However, it is somewhat like high end audio. Putting together a system to play music with great fidelity can take decades and cost a fortune. Converting analog to digital can be the same. It has all the potential trade offs.”

@ghdprentice nailed it. 

I once visited a gentleman who had digitized his entire vinyl collection. Honestly, I wasn’t impressed. Something about the process, seems to strip away the soul of the music. When you digitize, no matter how good the gear, you’re inevitably “flattening” something that was meant to live in the analog domain.

Vinyl is alive in a way digital just can’t quite capture — the ritual, the warmth, even the imperfections. Digitizing feels a bit like trying to bottle up nature’s beauty… you get the image, but not the essence. Some if you may disagree with this assertion but that’s been my experience. I enjoy it all…records, cd’s and streaming. 

If I were in OP shoes, I’d invest in a solid digital streaming platform first and then store the records away for six months before letting them go. That way, you’ll know for sure whether you miss the ritual and sound of records before making a permanent decision. No sense in regretting walking away from something you might still love and enjoy. 

I use Rega mini phono out to windows pc running audacity, CD res + stereo.  In audacity I apply click filter and dynamic range normalization. Then export to disk and tag using Picard auto tagging where possible or manual tag editor included in dbpoweramp if needed.   Sound quality is top notch.  You need to make sure the usb driver used supports cd res streaming which should not be a problem with most newer PCs. 
 

Once you get the process down it is pretty fast and easy.   Most time is spent playing the record.  
 

 

Good luck!

Probably 15 years ago I used a Pro-Ject phono preamp with a usb out to my MacBook and used some free software to remove surface noise, etc.  Back then many LPs in my genre still had not been digitalized or were available only as MP3’s.

 

I did about 3 albums and as others have noted it’s very labor intensive. Ymmv