![]() Mp3 and then going back - I'd try to avoid that if possible. May be getting into trouble with your sound quality by coming out of Since the file has already been compressed when converted to mp3, you "Fast and Smooth", then Normalize to -2db for most of my stuff. You lose subtle dynamic range, but end up with a signalīasically, I'll EQ first, then use the AUDynamics Processor preset Select Sample Rate, Bit Depth and Dithering of the audio to be. I also do not do any EQ after Normalization or Compression -īasically, you want to get the best quality sound first, then finishīy compressing and normalizing. Tick the Dither check box to improve the audio quality of exported audio at 16-bit resolution. We offer a high-quality Audio Reel transfer service to digital file formats such as WAV or AIFF, we never transfer and. To get the maximum amount of consistent output, I'd use a compressionįunction to reduce output variance, then use the "Normalize" function. This is a hi-res audio format, uncompressed and lossless, so you can expect great quality at the cost of storage space. You normalize, there won't be much change. Says "WOW!" at -2db, but the rest of the conversation is at -20db, and Spike of sound keeping the overall level relatively low. So, the driving factor on the output level will be whether you have a I'm not familiar with Levelator, but by itself, "Normalize" brings So my question is, does anyone have any suggestions for how to do this and get a better end result?Īlso, can someone tell me, does the 'normalize' function in this app do something equivalent to what Levelator does? For those not familiar with it, it's designed to take a file where there are volume disparities in different parts of the file and to eliminate those disparities, to give you a file where the volume is fairly constant.Īgain, I want these to put on an iPod in as compact a file size as possible and the sound quality doesn't have to be anything special, it's just mono/spoken word stuff. ![]() But with this material, once I ran through that process the sound quality is horrible, I'm guessing it's clipping or something. Usually that gives me an acceptable result. Apply a 10 band EQ for spoken material that emphasizes mid range frequencies. Then you can delete your audio within each track in your. If you mute all but a single track and export the individual track as an AIFF file (AIFF files are uncompressed and can preserve the original audio quality) and do that for each track, they will be normalized on export. Then take the AIFF file and increase volume 50%Ĥ. In the case above, though, we can use normalization to our advantage. Run that file through Levelator (a great program someone here actually told me about, needs a WAV or AIFF file, though)ģ. ![]() ![]() What I usually do with these kinds of things, especially if the questions are coming in over phone lines, is this:Ģ. Once I get up to freeway speed, the road noise drowns out the audio. Most of the time it's fine but for the Question and Answer segments, for some reason these are recorded at too low a volume. I've got course material on MP3 that I listen to in the car via my iPod. ![]()
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