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Spliting audio tracks left and right
Posted by Dan Martland on August 21, 2006 at 3:29 amDoes anyone know a easier and faster way on spliting audio tracks (A1 & A2), left and right on a full sequence, rather than going to each individual clip and panning the channels.
I find this very frustrating and very time consuming!
Many thanksDan
Dan Martland replied 19 years, 9 months ago 4 Members · 5 Replies -
5 Replies
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Thaxter Clavemarlton
August 21, 2006 at 3:56 amSelect (highlight) all of the clips on A1 and go to Modify (menu) audio Pan Left.
Do the same with A2 but Pan Right.
Done.
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Steve Cohen
August 21, 2006 at 12:25 pmIf the audio is a Stereo Pair, you will have to make it 2 channel first Highlight all the tracks by hitting control A and Option L will make them 2 channel instead of stereo.
Then you can do what Thax suggested but a keyboard shortcut for that is (Control ,) for Pan Left and (Control /) for Pan right.
Steve Cohen
Editor
O2 Media Inc. -
Thaxter Clavemarlton
August 21, 2006 at 1:02 pm[Steve C] “If the audio is a Stereo Pair, you will have to make it 2 channel first …”
It the audio is a “Stereo Pair”, it is ALREADY panned L and R.
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Bret Williams
August 21, 2006 at 4:37 pmYes, but you can’t pan a stereo pair to the left. It will just reverse the pan. Left to right, right to left, etc.
However, I think what you’re looking for is a track by track delineation instead of a clip by clip.
Goto seq settings and chnage the audio outputs from stereo to dual mono. Leave the tracks at 2 if that’s all you need.
Then, in the audio mixer make sure the tracks panel is open. Then right click on each track and you can choose it’s output. Either track 1 or 2 in this case.
So, for example if youre trying to make a discreet master with VO and music/sfx on separate channels, you’d make sure all music and sfx in your timeline were on a grouping of tracks like tracks 3-8 for example. Then, in the mixer you’d route all those to output 2. Then on tracks 1-2 (VO, interviews, voice, etc.) you’d route those tracks to output 1.
Now, BEFORE all this can work, you’ll have to go into your audio/video settings and change the hardware settings for your particular card/device. If yoiu’re just doing 2 channels like above, this might not be neccessary at all. But if you’re trying to output to 4 channels (like 4 channel 32khz DV for example) you’ll have to change the settings to 4 channels 32khz before it will actually work. Best to make a new easy setup called NTSC DV 4 channel or something like that.
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Dan Martland
August 22, 2006 at 10:28 pmMany thanks for everyones help. Cant believe it were that simple! Thanks again
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