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I would think so, because a flash drive functions in a manner similar to the hard disk, but with expedited speed. You'd have to adjust the settings of your audio software to save the recording on to your flash drive instead of wherever it defaults to. You'd also need to make sure that your flash drive has enough space to accept the size of the music file. That, of course, would depend on what format you are saving the file in and/or if you're compressing it to something more compact like an mp3 file. I have found that when recording (and audio processing) a vinyl file, saving it at 320 kbps seems to offer a very high quality sound...but does not take up as much space as an uncompressed file. I guess it depends on if you want a pristine, uncompressed copy or not. One other comment: You'd also have the option of saving the file to your hard drive, and then transferring it to the flash drive when you're confident that it sound the way you want and that it will fit. Good luck!
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.No, this turntable allows you to connect to a computer to transfer records to digital format with recording software.
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