Some what off topic but just thought I would throw it out there, some
audiofiles cherish the light pop and click now and then. I know why you
would want to do this but there is a part of me that kringes at the thought
of tampering with a pease of history like that. I know you want the best
quality you can get but I love to find Vinal rip MP3's even with the extra
noise I regard it as part of the character of the track. I am probably way
off base here but thank you for your time for my sope box.
Jake
----- Original Message -----
From: "Chris Snyder" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, May 10, 2011 12:16 AM
Subject: Re: adjusting incriments of scrub wheel
Hi Chuck and Slau,
Thanks for the info. It'll be very helpful. On the pop click note, when I
say that the plugin was a filter, it didn't mean as a substitute for a
plosive filter on the mic, I meant that it removes mouth noise. If you run
it on a recording of an old record, it would remove the pops of a gently
scratched record.
I know there must be one.
Friendly,
Chris
On May 9, 2011, at 8:45 AM, Slau Halatyn wrote:
Hi Chris,
Chuck's comment on using the Command modifier while scrubbing is correct,
although it is dependent upon which zoom level you're in. So, in general,
zooming way out will give you a broader stroke, so to speak, and the
Command modifier will narrow that focus. Alternately, if you zoom way in,
the range of motion for scrubbing will be a lot tighter and the Command
modifier will narrow it even more. I find that zooming in too far is kind
of frustrating for scrub purposes. The C24 has some dedicated buttons for
zoom level and I think you'll find that somewhere around level 2 or 3
works best.
HTH,
Slau
On May 9, 2011, at 5:01 AM, Chris Snyder wrote:
Hi Guys,
I must simply be brain dead today, but I just can't seem to find the
command to make the C-24's scrub wheel change the amount of selection as
the wheel is turned while in scrub mode. I'm editing a voice track for
breaths and pops, and I want to adjust how much my scrub will cover at
one turn. Does anyone know the keyboard command to do this?
Thanks.
Friendly,
Chris