Forum Replies Created
-
I was actually coming on to the forum to post the exact same question.
I use Premiere pro and I get a student discount so I can afford it but in college for some reason we are made use FCPX on the iMacs. Dont ask me why? The have all the other adobe software.
I mostly dislike FCPX but marking multiple in and outs on a single clip and saving them to different keywords and favourites and then being able to hide all the ones you dont like makes sorting things so easy and fast.
I’m guessing it just comes down to creating bins and custom short-cuts within premiere pro itself. -
Colin O’h
February 4, 2015 at 10:35 am in reply to: Premiere Pro doesn’t recognise multi channel audioWell once my sony vegas trial ran out I found the solution and it was totally stupid of me not to spot.
I updated to Premiere Pro cc 2014.0.1 from 2014.0.0
I was using a trial of Sony Vegas to export the missing audio file and the extra steps, while only adding about 10 minutes to my workflow, were a pain in the behind.
Once I updated it was working fine for me.
My files were in either .m2ts or .ts formats of gaming footage recorded in the Hauppauge HD PDR 2 -
Colin O’h
February 4, 2015 at 10:33 am in reply to: 2-audio channel clips only import to one channel…wut up???I had the same problem and was about to post in my thread about it in case it got dug up by and search engines.
I use Premiere pro CC on a monthly subscription and all it took was for me to actually update to 2014.0.1
I was using a trial of Sony Vegas to export the missing audio file and the extra steps, while onl adding about 10 minutes to my workflow, were a pain in the behind.
Once I updated it was working fine for me.
My files were in either .m2ts or .ts formats of gaming footage recorded in the Hauppauge HD PDR 2 -
Ive attached a capture of the sound track in Premiere pro
Everything below the blue line is pc fan noise, button clicks, chair creaks ect.
thats what im trying to removehttps://www.dropbox.com/s/ohoaktwv2ew8a06/Capture.PNG?dl=0
-
Colin O’h
December 18, 2014 at 5:31 pm in reply to: Premiere Pro doesn’t recognise multi channel audiothanks for the help.
that program didnt seem to work for me eitherThe only solution I can do right now is export the audio track I need with Vegas and then add the track as an audio file to PremierePro.
It’s a bit of a pain as its adding extra steps that id just rather not have to do but I’m a bit stuck now. -
Colin O’h
December 11, 2014 at 10:12 pm in reply to: Premiere Pro doesn’t recognise multi channel audioHi Merlin
Thanks for the response but this didnt solve the problem.
All that happens is i get two mono tracks of the video audio and no mic audio.
The files are MPEG-TS or filename.tsBellow are some screen shots of the audio settings in Premiere Pro and how the timeline appears in Premiere and Vegas
The tracks in vegas are video, video audio, mic audio and PC audio.
the mic and PC audio in vegas are empty because they weren’t making noise in the sample clip.https://www.dropbox.com/s/b5zvypsid0shg3k/Screen%20Shot%202014-12-11%20at%2021.37.51.png?dl=0
https://www.dropbox.com/s/r6izag9fibthkg9/Screen%20Shot%202014-12-11%20at%2021.38.34.png?dl=0
https://www.dropbox.com/s/p2aj4ewpv2hc270/vegas.PNG?dl=0 -
Colin O’h
December 11, 2014 at 4:48 pm in reply to: Premiere Pro doesn’t recognise multi channel audioHi, thanks for the reply.
That solution didn’t work for me. All that happened was that I got two tracks with the same audio on each. Both tracks had the audio from the video and not the audio from the second source on a separate track.I’ve tried searching for info about multi track audio for premiere pro but I can’t find anything even close to what I’m looking for. Maybe I’m searching for the wrong terms.
What is the correct term for a video file with multiple audio tracks attached?
Thanks in advance for any help.