Did you try using the Audio Gain feature on the clip on the timeline. 
Right-click the clip and go down near the bottom and select "Audio Gain" 
and turn it up.  That will affect the volume on the entire clip.

Glen in Vegas


dr_dave_doleshal 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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