vegas audio problems
-
- Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2003 2:56 pm
vegas audio problems
If I leave the audio level as it is, when i render it, its way too quiet. If I move it up even a bit its too loud. What's the best setting for audio?
- Bauzi
- Joined: Fri May 21, 2004 12:48 pm
- Status: Under High Voltage
- Location: Austria (uhm the other country without kangaroos^^)
- Contact:
strange.
Render out only the video.
Than render out the audio in .wav. Edit the audio level in something like Audacity (Freeware). Save the new edited .wav.
Mux (add the audio to the video in a container like .avi) together the video and audio.
You can mux with VDM:
-Open the video
-Add in the streamlist the edited audio
-Render out a looseless file. Dada! You have now your video and audio in a container like .avi
Render out an mp4 with zarxGUI, meGUI or with skripts.
This is pretty "advanced" knowledge so I better ask now: Any questions?
Render out only the video.
Than render out the audio in .wav. Edit the audio level in something like Audacity (Freeware). Save the new edited .wav.
Mux (add the audio to the video in a container like .avi) together the video and audio.
You can mux with VDM:
-Open the video
-Add in the streamlist the edited audio
-Render out a looseless file. Dada! You have now your video and audio in a container like .avi
Render out an mp4 with zarxGUI, meGUI or with skripts.
This is pretty "advanced" knowledge so I better ask now: Any questions?
You can find me on YT under "Bauzi514". Subscribe to never miss my AMV releases.
-
- Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2003 2:56 pm
- Bauzi
- Joined: Fri May 21, 2004 12:48 pm
- Status: Under High Voltage
- Location: Austria (uhm the other country without kangaroos^^)
- Contact:
It´s not hard. You do such things one time with help and you remeber it for ever. It´s like swimingANBU_Itaichi1986 wrote:is there anyway to do it without going through all that?
Alright I looked again and found this methode:
-Render out your video out of Vegas (looseless codec of course, audio and video together)
-Load it into VDM
-Go to streamlist. Rightclick the audio stream. Click full processing mode and now you´re able to change the volume there.
If think it would be better to decrease it to normal.
-Now you can render out an XviD like the guides told you:
http://www.animemusicvideos.org/guides/ ... /xvid.html
Don´t forget to add the audio compression too!!!
http://www.animemusicvideos.org/guides/ ... audio.html
-Or render out a new looseless copy with fixed audio and use zarxGUI (highly recommended!):
http://www.animemusicvideos.org/guides/ ... 64gui.html
You can find me on YT under "Bauzi514". Subscribe to never miss my AMV releases.
- Rapture**
- Joined: Thu Nov 23, 2006 2:19 pm
- Location: Vilnius , Lithuania
Re: vegas audio problems
Most likely your source audio file is at fault. I hope you're not editing with .mp3 file...ANBU_Itaichi1986 wrote:If I leave the audio level as it is, when i render it, its way too quiet. If I move it up even a bit its too loud. What's the best setting for audio?
Anyway - just use any audio editing program. Any will do,as long as it has 'Normalize' setting. Just let your audio trough the program,adjust volume,set it to 'Normalize',and save it as lossless .wav file,then just throw it in the timeline.
-
- Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2003 2:56 pm
Re: vegas audio problems
It has to be .wav? That wouldve been so helpfull to know 5 months ago -_- I think I just figured out what my problem is...Rapture** wrote:Most likely your source audio file is at fault. I hope you're not editing with .mp3 file...ANBU_Itaichi1986 wrote:If I leave the audio level as it is, when i render it, its way too quiet. If I move it up even a bit its too loud. What's the best setting for audio?
Anyway - just use any audio editing program. Any will do,as long as it has 'Normalize' setting. Just let your audio trough the program,adjust volume,set it to 'Normalize',and save it as lossless .wav file,then just throw it in the timeline.