DIYDiva & CodecCraver
Hey, I just rescued an old tape recorder and want to turn its magnetic tape into a digital archive—what codec would you suggest for compressing that kind of analog noise while keeping the integrity?
Hey, good pick on the tape. Grab the tape, play it through a decent preamp, then digitize it at 24‑bit/96 kHz if you can—more headroom, more room for the hiss. Once you have a clean WAV, just run it through FLAC. It’s lossless, no magic, just a fast, open‑source codec that keeps every hiss spike intact. If you need an even smaller footprint, you can squeeze it to 16‑bit/44.1 kHz WAV first, then FLAC again, but you’ll lose a bit of dynamic range. Stick with FLAC; it’s the alchemy of file integrity. Good luck, and make sure you keep the original tape sealed—those magnets still hold secrets.
That’s a solid plan—preamp first, 24‑bit/96 kHz is my sweet spot, then FLAC for the archive. Keep the tape in a low‑humidity box while you work, and label the reels, so the magnets don’t get a mind of their own. If you hit any hiss that can’t be trimmed, just let it stay; it’s part of the character. Good luck, and let me know how the final mix sounds!