Have you played it back using another program such as a media player?
Is the file being recorded through Audition and then rendered out with the echo effect?
December 9, 2011 at 4:21 am
in reply to: Audio Muted
In the past I’ve seen that if you mute media player software and don’t unmute before exiting it can have adverse effects in other programs or browsers.
Uninstalling and reinstalling the soundcard drivers may help too.
I agree that audio jack alerts are annoying. I’ll check out your reg edit. I encounter the problem on an XP Netbook too. Windows thinks everyone is as dumb as they are. 😉
We are on Vegas 10… not sure about the e
In the Help menu in Vegas select About Vegas Pro to see what version is installed.
650gb avi file: not sure if it was compressed or not
Vegas tells you the compression format at the bottom of the Explorer window in Vegas when a video is selected.
Which MP4 format are you trying to render to, I use the “Sony AVC/MVC” which has High Def. templates ready to use.
What resolution is the video to be rendered at? 480? 720? 1080?
Computer? OS? 32 or 64 bit?
Obviously you have the hard drive space?
Are you on Vegas 10e
This 650gb .avi file is lossless? or compressed? Did it complete?
If everyone’s audio is on separate channels you can try using a software gate/compressor on each track and the gate can be set to a threshold above the breath level keep the channel silent until the person speaks. Tweaking will need to be done for each channel.
Another software to consider using is called Levelator. It will even out the recording level over the length of the audio track. For speech only and it’s FREE to use. https://www.conversationsnetwork.org/levelator