Thanks John and Adam for the responses. I do have separate left and right outputs from the preamp. The adaptor used to connect the 2 RCA plugs to the single Line In plug is supposed to be a Stereo adaptor. (It's just a cheapy from Radio Shack). My understanding from Gateway (model GM5442) is that the Line In jack on the sound card is supposed to be stereo.
Thanks
-- Buella
"John" wrote:
[Quoted Text] > Double check the male plug you're using from the amp to the Line-In female > plug. Sometimes the female is mono or, if stereo, the two channels may not > align correctly with the make plug you are using. > > > "Adam Albright" <AA[ at ]ABC.net> wrote in message > news:99b173pc6tq3sgs9s41ittk6isns3t30i8[ at ]4ax.com... > > On Wed, 13 Jun 2007 19:34:01 -0700, Buella > > <Buella[ at ]discussions.microsoft.com> wrote: > > > >>I'm using Windows Vista Home Premium. > >> > >>I'm using the tape out from an old preamp to connect to the Line In on my > >>sound card. It is recording but I only seem to be getting one channel (no > >>stereo). > > > > Common problem. Professional audio cards support multiple input > > channels. You may be able to configure some sound cards or build in > > audio coming from a motherboard to keep your left and right channels > > separate by reassigning some speaker ports BUT unless you can do the > > same through your preamp (have SPERATE right and left channel out > > you're still barking up the wrong tree. > >> > >>I can play some of the sample music files that came on the computer and > >>I'm > >>getting both channels. > > > > That's because the sample files contain BOTH a left and right channel. > > What you're doing combines the audio into a single channel when you're > > trying to capture it thus losing the stereo effect. > > > > > > >
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