Ted Snow
Forum Replies Created
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Ed,
Actually I did use the positioning tab and not the pan…but I did not use reduce interlace flicker. Will give that a try. Thanks -
Thanks Ed and Chris…will try your suggestions.
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One thing you might try also is to render the video using “best” quality. I render ALL photo montages using the “best” setting. It DOES make a difference from my experience.
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Ted Snow
July 30, 2005 at 6:40 pm in reply to: What are good printers on the market now to print on DVDsBTW I’m using the R200
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Ted Snow
July 30, 2005 at 6:40 pm in reply to: What are good printers on the market now to print on DVDsI use CorelDraw. I made up my own generic label template with all my business info (name, phone #, etc) in small letters around the outer edge of the disk. I then import any pics, add text then export that to a tiff file. I then pull that tiff file into the Epson Print CD software and print my DVD’s. Works out great for me.
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Does anyone know off hand if plugging into the mini jack will send the audio to the main stereo track of the camcorder or will it need to be set up so it records on the secondary stereo tracks? Just curious.
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Actually, we haven’t bought a camera yet. I had an old JVC 3CCD analog camera that I donated to the church and we have been using it…recording directly to a stand alone DVD recorder…but the picture is not all that great. Even the cheaper 1CCD digital camcorders these days have a much better picture than this old camera. Even with the 1/8″ mini plug I should be able to send the audio to the camcorder. I just experimented with my Sony 460…plugged an A/V cable into the jack and it didn’t affect the video portion. I haven’t tried sending audio to it yet, but I see no reason why it shouldn’t work.
Thanks Gary! -
If it is a pretty low frequency you can cut it with a parametric EQ and not affect the overall audio too much. You can try highlighting a section of the audio and put it on loop playback, add an EQ effect, do a cut on the EQ and slowly sweep it back and forth while playing the clip until you find the offending frequency of the thump. A parametric EQ will allow you to adjust the Q (width of the cut) so you can pinpoint the frequency in a much narrower range. Once you find the freq you need to cut, you can split the event that just has the thump in it and move it to a seperate track, add the EQ to that track only, and it will not affect the rest of your audio.
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Thanks Doug, according to Intel’s website the specs on this processor indicates a “thermal spec” of 69.1 C. I’m not sure if this is the “shut down” temp or what. I’ll check out Tom’s Hardware. Thanks for the tip.
Ted -
Just another tidbit…do not stop either device (camera or audio recorder) once recording starts. Then once you sync up the audio and video, they will be in sync throughout the entire project. Then just group the two events and any editing you do will affect both events.