radiotelefonia wrote:I am no professional and no longer a collector (I can't do it here). I do my repairs from a tango point of view.
Send my recording to anyone you want... in the meantime... how do we repair something when we don't have elements?
My engineer friends are out of town - one's on vacation and the other is working on the west coast. Hopefully, I'll hear from them when they return.
It's very tough to restore a 78rpm recording when you don't have the original disc to work with. If you've ripped the audio from a CD, someone's already processed the raw file, and probably wiped out information you need. Most CD reissues of songs start right at the beginning of the music, eliminating any lead-in noise that you could use to create a noiseprint. The CD reissues tend to EQ the discs very flat, so they sound fairly lifeless compared to the original disc.
I spent about an hour playing with the same source file in two different audio programs (one of which was specifically designed for 78rpm restoration), and got similar results to yours. Which program were you working with?
Derek