The only idea that occurs to me is to export the audio portion of the
timeline as a wav file, import that and turn off the existing audio tracks.
But you might want to use the work area bar to isolate a short section of
the multi-track audio first, to see if the volume you need is retained in
the process. Adjust your export settings for audio only and work area
versus project.
David Hurdon
At 05:11 PM 9/20/2006 +0000, you wrote:
Thank you,
I'm not sure if I am using the calculator properly, but it
nevertheless may have pinpointed the problem. In certain segments of
program, the audio volume was too low. Using the red ribbons to
increase the volume was not sufficient (raising it to an indicated
200% barely increased the volume at all - more like a 5% increase, not
a 100% increase. Someone had suggested that a possible solution was to
duplicate those soft portions of the audio track, so that in such
places I have as many as 7 identical tracks of the same audio. I was
skeptical, but I tried it, and it actually worked. However, the
calculator shows that even using 3 or four audio streams severely cuts
down on the allowable bitrate, (Using seven streams apparently cut the
allowable bitrate down to below zero).
So, is there some OTHER workable method available in Premiere 6.5 to
raise the level of low audio besides multiplying the streams or
manipulating the red ribbons?
Regards,
DAVE
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