Hi, If you have sighted assistence, gwc (gnome wave ccleaner), is the best program under linux that i know of. Gramofile works, but its menus is a pain with speech and the filtering is not nearly as good as that of gwc. When you get to the "process audio signal" screen in gramofile, you should try the default filter, but repeate it about another three times to get good results. You can press enterthree times once you are on the right place to make the filter used four times in a single run. I reasently also found a command line tracksplitter program. one can give it understandable paramaters allowing for good results. I never use gramofile's track splitting feature as i found that does not work well at all. HTH Willem On Fri, 29 Oct 2004, Cheryl Homiak wrote: > Hi all. > a friend wants me to convert some of her cassettes of music to cds. My only > problem is that it's obvious that some of these were originally on record > albums and the cassette version has retained the nice bacon-and-egg-frying > sounds of scratchy records. Is there a way for me to get rid of some of this > noise? I do recall that gramofile has some noise filtering but I seem to have > a hard time getting through gramofile's menus and getting the result i want. > > > Just to explain: I'm doing this by making wav files from the cassettes and > then making audio cds. > Thanks. > > > -- > Cheryl > > "Where your treasure is, there will your heart be also." > > > _______________________________________________ > Speakup mailing list > Speakup at braille.uwo.ca > http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup >