Apparently, volume levels are additive in the traks hence, the crackling. My projects contain a music track in addition ro the audio track from the camcorder. I solved the crackling by lowering the master volume 6 db in the audio mixer. Its not the way things should be done, but it does bring your audio back to normality. I exported my entire audio track (from the timeline)to Cool Edit Pro, or you could use Adobe Audition - same thing select the filter that takes out the clicks - save the file - bring it back into Ppro and sit it right on the timeline where your original audio track was.Sync wise, it will line up exactly with the picture, especially if you have "snap to" enabled. One remedy for the audio cracks and clicks/pops etc caused by this Adobe problem is this: Hope, the developement stuff of Adobe is listening here. The bug occurs often at that frames in the timeline, where i change the volumes for different channels in the audio-mixer. I think this is a serious bug in PPRO and that should be fixed. I first thougt, it was my soundcard and I spent money on a new one.
When i export only the audio tracks to wav, then delete the content of the audio tracks and reimport the rendered wav-file, and then export the movie as dv avi-file, there is no crackling. I had the same problem, if you have more than one audio track and you render out to dv avi-file with audio imbedded, there is random crackling in the movie.
I was able to work around this problem by outputting the audio as a WAV file and then using that WAV file in the DVD authoring software - instead of using the WAV file created by Premiere during the Video/Audio output to AVI or MPEG-2 (Thumper Strauss - Dec 25, 2003)
I regularly split out my audio to two mono channels (different mics on the two channels) then bring the video and audio into the timeline seperately. I have been dreading this problem but it has not shown up. I found that if you export your audio into a wave file, unlink your current video and audio, delete your current audio, and inport your new wave file, everything works good.
I ran the patch and my audio sounds great. I have the Canopus DV REX TR and they have a Audio patch that helps with the newer motherboards with intel chipsets with intergrated audio. You can also apply the Dynamics effect to the master audio track in the Audio Mixer and use the limiter to ensure the audio will not exceed 0db. You can do this from the Audio Mixer in the Audio Workspace. Reduce the overall project volume to make sure that you do not exceed 0db. Reset until you stop and hit play again), it will sound fine when you export Timeline, they will stay on once the peak threshold is hit, and they aren't Peak indicator lights are never lit (while you're playing through your Menu, can't remember it offhand), and adjust the volume such that the red If you switch to audio editing mode (it's one of the options in the window Your audio is exceeding the peak value allowed in DVD audio and it's in my experience it will sound poor if the conversion is done by Premiere. If you changed the sample rate, or the bit rate, of the audio. Decreasing the amount of data being processed by capturing the audio or video at a lower data rate prevents the sound and video cards from having to share resources. When both sound and video cards use DMA and share resources, the video takes precedence so sufficient resources for the audio are not available, decreasing the quality of the audio playback. Some sound and video cards use Direct Memory Access (DMA), a method of transferring data from a device to memory without using the microprocessor, thus improving performance. NOTE: If the audio still plays with lower quality when played with video, select a lower format (e.g., 22 kHz) from the "Format:" drop-down menu in the "Audio Options" dialog box and recapture the movie. In the "Audio Options" dialog box, select "16 Bit - Mono" from the "Rate:" drop-down menu, then click "OK" to close the remaining dialog boxes. Choose "Audio Recording Options." from the Movie Capture menu.ģ.
Capture the audio at a lower sample rate:Ģ. In the "MJPEG Settings" section of the "Video Format" dialog box, specify a lower "Data Rate" value, then click "OK" to close the remaining dialog boxes.ī. In the "Recording Options" dialog box, click "Video Format."Ĥ. Choose "Recording Options." from the Movie Capture menu.ģ. In Premiere, choose "Movie Capture" from the "Capture" submenu of the File menu.Ģ. Capture the movie at a lower data rate:ġ. The audio tracks play independently as expected.Ī. Audio Tracks Play with Static and Low Quality in PremiereĪudio tracks play with low quality (e.g., static, noise) when played simultaneously with the video track of a captured movie clip in Adobe Premiere.