|
|
Réponse(s)
(1 - 5)
|
dim. 12 févr. 2006, 09:43
|
Moderator In Chief (MIC)
Groupe : Editors
Messages : 15,189
Inscrit : 23 déc. 01
Lieu : Paris - FR
Membre no 2,758
|
First things first, did the clipping occurred while recording in the analogue domain (before A/D) or the digital domain (during/after A/D)? Note that clipping is audible (you reach the top value and in digital it's UGLY), in analogue it distorts. If you are not clipping but the peak values are very high regarding the rest of the recording it's not a clipping problem this time.
--------------------
|
|
|
|
|
dim. 12 févr. 2006, 16:22
|
Newbie
Groupe : Members
Messages : 8
Inscrit : 04 févr. 06
Lieu : Marietta - US
Membre no 76,348
|
I think the clipping occured in the digital domain because I didn't notice it during recording. But the clipping sounds almost like a skip in a cd or a fraction of a second pause, i want to get rid of it in the recording. I use an MBox PT LE 6.4. What can I do?
|
|
|
|
|
ven. 24 mars 2006, 10:43
|
Junior Member
Groupe : Members
Messages : 178
Inscrit : 14 mars 05
Lieu : -
Membre no 62,351
|
QUOTE (mortalengines @ Feb 13 2006, 01:37) I thought I heard about being able to use the pencil tool to "redraw the waveform" so it has a peak instead of a region where the audio has been hacked off at the top- the digidesign forum may be of more help. I know you can do stuff like that in editing programs like Bias Peak. The pencil tool can handle digital clipping, if it's not too harsh. You just zoom in the waveform enough so you can clearly see the distorted wave, then draw it clean Alhough it's of course best not to record too loud signal, or use a slight compressor / limiter so no clipping occurs.
|
|
|
|
|
|
2 utilisateur(s) sur ce sujet (2 invité(s) et 0 utilisateur(s) anonyme(s))
0 membre(s) :
|
|
|